5 Ridiculous Victorian Etiquette Rules | What the Stuff?!

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 6K

  • @VanJA2102
    @VanJA2102 Před 7 lety +730

    Interesting fact concerning the corsets: Around 1900, Empress Elisabeth of Austria was killed by a man who stabbed her in the heart but her corset was so tight that it actually prevented bleeding and she was able to walk another 100 metres before collapsing. Just imagine how tight that corset must have been!

    • @Hope-ih7wx
      @Hope-ih7wx Před 7 lety +83

      Vanessa
      To be fair, Queen Sissy wore her corsets extremely tight, even for the era! Her lacing was of the extremist sort.
      She tried her best to keep it around 18-20 inches for the majority of her life. Even following her pregnancies.
      The tightness was certainly something remarkable!

    • @GwynethSleuth
      @GwynethSleuth Před 7 lety +8

      Not unlike Scarlett O'Hara in "Gone with the Wind".

    • @starlinguk
      @starlinguk Před 6 lety +29

      Exactly! Her "tight lacing" was considered to be unhealthy even in those days. It was basically a way to feel in control. A disorder. She didn't always tight lace, though, she didn't do it when she was happy.

    • @alexchristison8780
      @alexchristison8780 Před 6 lety +1

      Vanessa
      The part about the corset is probably a myth but she was stabbed by an anarchist.

    • @NurmaBP
      @NurmaBP Před 6 lety +16

      Corset is not as extreme as plastic surgery in modern era. We cut bones with some kind of mini chainsaw these days, in the name of beauty.

  • @eirikmurito
    @eirikmurito Před 8 lety +612

    things havent changed much. high rank politicians and celebrities never talk to regular people unless u have been introduced to them..

    • @brontiq
      @brontiq Před 8 lety +14

      but that's not due to etiquette rule. there's a completely different reason behind it. no comparison

    • @eirikmurito
      @eirikmurito Před 8 lety +36

      l.xtasy no its because they dont wanna talk to us. which im pretty sure its the reason they made that etiquette rule back then..

    • @sootherbs
      @sootherbs Před 8 lety +13

      I was going to comment the same thing, and not just politicians and celebrities but wealthier people in general, the upper middle class and higher..some things have not changed much although it tries to hide behind the veil of democracy. Most of the wealthy class survived due to the wealth acquired by the past generations of wealthy families, it's no rocket science, and since that wealth was generally acquired by unjust and immoral methods, it's no wonder that it's referred to with dislike...

    • @piroshi3rd
      @piroshi3rd Před 8 lety +4

      It's probably the whole 1% thing. Most people in the US are poor now, and the rich probably has to be extra careful about gold diggers. I understand not wanting to open up to every person you meet or strike up conversations if you have a lot at risk if someone gets close to you. I bet it's lonely.
      If another rich friend though-- introduces someone poor to them-- then that means that poor person must be trustworthy, though, right? So it does work the same, in theory.

    • @BlackMoonCrewFam
      @BlackMoonCrewFam Před 8 lety +3

      true, and to get involved with those kind of people takes a lot of time and effort. Trust me I know the feeling lol. not ALL celebs are like that though but there are a lot who are.

  • @AzaleaLala
    @AzaleaLala Před 6 lety +684

    Some of the rules are pretty crazy, but we could do with more manners and etiquette in today's society.

  • @Jaycee-he6su
    @Jaycee-he6su Před 6 lety +762

    Everyone, mean EVERYONE should chew with their mouth closed. ://

    • @truthmatters-jt5up
      @truthmatters-jt5up Před 6 lety +2

      i concur, but it is not a specific etiquette in every country.

    • @Jaycee-he6su
      @Jaycee-he6su Před 6 lety +16

      yes, but most Americans follow it. Except the few nasties XD

    • @HawkinaBox
      @HawkinaBox Před 5 lety +10

      I have to be around people who don't chew with their mouth closed and it is absolutely terrible. It was worse when I was younger, around 12, and had to sit at a table around younger kids who were six or seven. Disgusting.

    • @truthmatters-jt5up
      @truthmatters-jt5up Před 5 lety +3

      @@Jaycee-he6su i normally eat quite a lot (high metabolism), but will literally lose my appetite if someone nearby is eating w mouth open. it is gross.

    • @truthmatters-jt5up
      @truthmatters-jt5up Před 5 lety +2

      ​@@HawkinaBox any child over 5 should have at least beginnings of good table manners.. when i have to be around young-uns who haven't been taught, yes it is GROSS.

  • @tylerpasop6770
    @tylerpasop6770 Před 8 lety +4142

    I like the rule about how a man has to put out his cigar before talking to a girl

  • @VictoriaLenora
    @VictoriaLenora Před 8 lety +3735

    I like the "don't talk to a lady unless she acknowledges you" rule.

    • @mark1811able
      @mark1811able Před 8 lety +203

      No cat calling xD

    • @carultch
      @carultch Před 8 lety +139

      Do you want equality or not? If you have gender equality in that kind of rule, it would be impossible for anyone to talk to anyone else.

    • @mir13acle
      @mir13acle Před 8 lety +10

      yeah XD

    • @rosethornne1539
      @rosethornne1539 Před 7 lety +130

      and no grabbing

    • @ali_ozz1388
      @ali_ozz1388 Před 7 lety +11

      yeah! make this rule again!

  • @nickyoung630
    @nickyoung630 Před 5 lety +228

    That table is driving me crazy

    • @PrizAmezcua
      @PrizAmezcua Před 5 lety +19

      Just came all the way down to the comments to see if I wasn't alone. PLEASE straighten that table!!!

    • @Yeiyn343
      @Yeiyn343 Před 5 lety +12

      @@PrizAmezcua I agree. It looks like it will collapse at any moment. Haha!

    • @DizzyKizzy64
      @DizzyKizzy64 Před 4 lety +9

      Thank god it annoyed other people too.

    • @theressomethinonyawface4581
      @theressomethinonyawface4581 Před 4 lety +6

      When my ocd comes in- FIX THAT TABLEEEEEEEEEE

    • @TiffanyRusell
      @TiffanyRusell Před 3 lety +1

      Sameeee 😂

  • @bethrichards9904
    @bethrichards9904 Před 6 lety +300

    They keep showing clips of regency era films when talking about the Victorians........

    • @meowgaetan7159
      @meowgaetan7159 Před 5 lety +6

      Pride and Prejudice is based near the Victorian era time period -_-

    • @theducklinghomesteadandgar6639
      @theducklinghomesteadandgar6639 Před 5 lety +3

      Likely the easiest and most abundant to find! Lol! Or she is getting her Barron and Viscount reversed, i.e. Regency and Victorian...lol!
      I love her sarcastic humor about it all!! 😋

    • @dusty4502
      @dusty4502 Před 5 lety +8

      That bothered me too. I bet they were banking on people not knowing enough to care. It's not close enough to be valid though. The societal norms were no where near as prudish and stodgy.

    • @pommom-cm1ej
      @pommom-cm1ej Před 4 lety

      Yesssss! My thots exactly!

    • @Tekirai
      @Tekirai Před 4 lety +4

      Meow Gaetan uhh not really no it’s based in the regency era notice the laxed clothing and relaxed hairstyles. The Victorian errs didn’t start til 1837 and during that time clothing was starting to pick up being stuffy again

  • @LovelyAbnormal_Art
    @LovelyAbnormal_Art Před 8 lety +748

    I cried at "TRASH."

  • @DissociatedWomenIncorporated

    There's one "etiquette" rule that a lot of people still seem to follow, in that they ask "How are you?" and expect the answer to be "Fine, thank you" no matter what the truth is. If someone asks me how I am, I'll tell them the truth, good or bad. If they didn't actually want to know, well, they shouldn't have asked.

    • @Elicynderspyro
      @Elicynderspyro Před 8 lety +3

      But I've heard by an American guy that you will sound weird if you have a conversation like "How are you? I'm fine thank you, and you?" lol
      He was teaching non-native English speakers how to be more "natural" while talking.

    • @DissociatedWomenIncorporated
      @DissociatedWomenIncorporated Před 8 lety +12

      Elicynderspyro It is weird, it reduces those words to a meaningless ritual.

    • @Elicynderspyro
      @Elicynderspyro Před 8 lety +1

      Marianne Ibbotson Things that are taught to children in every non-English speaker country I suppose.

    • @DissociatedWomenIncorporated
      @DissociatedWomenIncorporated Před 8 lety +3

      Elicynderspyro Really? I've only ever encountered this attitude from native English speakers, myself.

    • @Elicynderspyro
      @Elicynderspyro Před 8 lety +1

      pixel girl​ That American said that the most normal way is like "How's it going? - I'm good, what about you?", still he said that "I'm fine" could be good in Great Britain while in the USA you'll sound weird.
      And actually I've never heard someone on the internet greet like they taught us in first grade lol
      Yeah, I probably kinda forgot about Britain before, I'm so sorry XD

  • @1freakisme
    @1freakisme Před 5 lety +347

    Crinolines wear extremely flexible and actually ver easy to move in. They weren't usually steel cages at all. They were actually a huge feminist show for back then because women used them to keep men from getting in their personal space

    • @grinninggoat5369
      @grinninggoat5369 Před 5 lety +20

      Wow, how extremely considerate and mannerly of you to choose to drop the word "Lesbian" in favor of the word "feminist". You were also right about the crinolines being so light and easy to move in. Perhaps you could demonstrate your knowledge to the disbelievers by taking a cliffside walk on a windy day next to a lake. lol (In case you didn't know, the use of crinolines actually caused many more accidental deaths amongst the women who wore them than it prevented any men or "feminists" from invading the outer sanctuary of some Git's secret garden! Women were actually blown off cliffs, drown when falling into water because they couldn't get out of the crinoline, caught on the side of a moving carriage and bound into the spokes, caught fire when walking even near a fireplace or dropping an ember, etc. Yay, let's hear it for those man fearing "feminists", right?)

    • @atmoak7063
      @atmoak7063 Před 5 lety +20

      Lulu Kelley *hides my attack doggo under it*
      *borkborkborkborkborkbork*

    • @xfinal_girl
      @xfinal_girl Před 4 lety +2

      FINALLY SOMONE KNPW THIS FACT YESSSSS!!!!!

    • @1freakisme
      @1freakisme Před 4 lety +12

      @@grinninggoat5369 bro wtf? What do lesbians have to do with this and i didn't say they were perfect but they were better than heat stroke from 5 petticoats and they could've drowned from their dresses being heavy? Have you ever worn historically accurate women's clothes cause im gonna tell ya i prefer me a crinoline

    • @grinninggoat5369
      @grinninggoat5369 Před 4 lety

      @@1freakisme , Ah, little Lulu, you ever heard the expression "always a day late and a dollar short"? I bet you hear it a lot if you're always sticking your nose into year old posts on youtube!
      If you can't figure out what I said and why then... your crinoline is too tight for some reason. (So, I guess maybe you're not such a little Lulu after all.)
      Have a nice day ;)
      P.S.- I'm not your "Bro", you silly git!

  • @mysteria_1305
    @mysteria_1305 Před 4 lety +95

    Corsets weren’t uncomfortably tight, it was a bra back then basically and it served the purpose of giving a certain shape to your waist line.
    I’m sure there were people who took it too far. However it was made for a healthier purpose

    • @shizukagozen777
      @shizukagozen777 Před 3 lety +1

      All the women who fainted or peed themselves because of their corsets would disagree with you.

    • @mysteria_1305
      @mysteria_1305 Před 3 lety +4

      shizukagozen777 because they took it too far! Also how does a corset make someone pee themselves? It covered the stomach and chest nothing lower.

    • @shizukagozen777
      @shizukagozen777 Před 3 lety +4

      @@mysteria_1305
      So ? It was still the norm to wear a corset very tight, no matter what people like you like to say on the internet.
      Because they were so tight, organs were all packed together, including the bladder, and when women laughed, they used to pee themselves a little bit, or more... In French, we have several verbs meaning "to laugh" coming from this fact.

    • @mysteria_1305
      @mysteria_1305 Před 3 lety +6

      shizukagozen777 I never said they couldn’t cause harm hun, or said what the normal was back then. I wasn’t there and haven’t researched it to know! As a matter of fact you’re agreeing in a roundabout way. People abused something that wasn’t intended to harm and suffered for it due to ignorance

    • @sillypuppy5940
      @sillypuppy5940 Před 3 lety

      Men wore corsets too, and not just for bad backs.

  • @mariamightbeamonster3684
    @mariamightbeamonster3684 Před 7 lety +1817

    i wish it was custom not to talk to people when they have their headphones in

  • @CB-wn2uq
    @CB-wn2uq Před 8 lety +322

    The "traaaash" part got me

  • @earthtomaggie6620
    @earthtomaggie6620 Před 6 lety +158

    Nice and interesting video, BUT:
    a) her name is Edith, not Agnes
    b) the s in viscount is silent so it’s basically “v-eye-count”
    c) crinolines were not as stiff as you indicate.. they were bendy since people still had to get through doors and stuff
    d) and finally, pride and prejudice does not take place in the Victorian era, but in the regency era
    😉

    • @kaitzi
      @kaitzi Před 6 lety +2

      I think she was just making up a name, like with Myrtle (?) and it happened to correspond with the clip.

    • @monafinlayson4637
      @monafinlayson4637 Před 4 lety

      Thank you

    • @jacobc8036
      @jacobc8036 Před 3 lety

      Wow 4 points wrong! That's a new false information record! Thanks for the heads up!

    • @kingnarothept6917
      @kingnarothept6917 Před 3 lety +3

      Also Corsets weren't that stiff/rigid either lol.

    • @jacobc8036
      @jacobc8036 Před 3 lety

      @@kingnarothept6917 now five! And to think I thought this would have me learn something

  • @jamesrobiscoe1174
    @jamesrobiscoe1174 Před 5 lety +77

    Pardon me, but what you call crinolines are actually hoops. Crinolines were the undergarments layers placed over the hoops.

  • @Darthbelal
    @Darthbelal Před 8 lety +256

    One little habit that I'd love to see society lose is wearing advertisements on the front one's t-shirt, or the ubiquitous baseball cap with some stupid phrase, ad, or logo on it.

    • @bonannylagasse8999
      @bonannylagasse8999 Před 8 lety +2

      NEVER!!

    • @reasonablechica
      @reasonablechica Před 8 lety +7

      +Darth Belal The most aggravating baseball hat/logo issue I see is the hat with the size stickers left on the bill.

    • @peterpiper7441
      @peterpiper7441 Před 8 lety +1

      +Darth Belal In this case she is advertising a country that she is probably not a citizen of, and probably doesn't even speak the language of.

    • @peterpiper7441
      @peterpiper7441 Před 8 lety +10

      I never understood why people want to turn their body into a walking free advertising billboard, and even pay for the privilege of doing so.

    • @LibraGamesUnlimited
      @LibraGamesUnlimited Před 8 lety +6

      +Peter Piper I don't know maybe they LIKE the product in question and want to show they like said product.

  • @Funnyfish66
    @Funnyfish66 Před 6 lety +748

    Of course you can fight crime. You already have a cage to throw them in

    • @greyweather7768
      @greyweather7768 Před 5 lety +5

      MummyChunks 😂😂

    • @stutid582
      @stutid582 Před 5 lety

      MummyChunks 😂😂😂😂 lol

    • @Daizedd
      @Daizedd Před 5 lety +4

      Well not always, because in certain times the crinoline wasnt used. But good joke!

    • @marialastname4398
      @marialastname4398 Před 5 lety +4

      It’s like a force field. No one can get close to you

    • @Tekirai
      @Tekirai Před 4 lety +2

      Now I wanna write the crinoline detective 🤣🤣

  • @PoGirlShines
    @PoGirlShines Před 6 lety +167

    We need a little more "civility" in our civilization.

  • @elisejee1632
    @elisejee1632 Před 5 lety +27

    Love the fact they put a pride and prejudice scene when it’s a regency era book 😂

  • @SP-ow9jl
    @SP-ow9jl Před 8 lety +418

    Man, that table on her right is going to fall!

    • @avirajsinhmahida6178
      @avirajsinhmahida6178 Před 8 lety +3

      it won't 😂😂😂😂

    • @xxxabc123xx
      @xxxabc123xx Před 8 lety +27

      Holy crap. Now that's really really bothering me.

    • @imbornthiswaybaby12
      @imbornthiswaybaby12 Před 7 lety +8

      Andrea P. So glad I finished the video before reading this. Otherwise it would have bothered me the whole time!

    • @xMrsh
      @xMrsh Před 7 lety +25

      Andrea P. I was looking for this comment. It distracted me the whole video.

    • @drahrenzy
      @drahrenzy Před 7 lety

      Andrea P. Thanks a lot. It's annoying ugh

  • @opensprit
    @opensprit Před 7 lety +89

    Every time you enter the bathroom, for any reason whatsoever, Wash Your Damn Hands before you leave. Every. Time.

  • @applejelly87
    @applejelly87 Před 5 lety +67

    A few errors..."viscount" is pronounced "vigh-count" (as in a long "i"), and the system of passing on property to the eldest son is primogeniture, not primogenitor.

    • @carultch
      @carultch Před 5 lety +4

      If a word wants to be pronounced correctly, it needs to be spelled without red herring letters.

    • @gypsywoman9140
      @gypsywoman9140 Před 5 lety +1

      @@carultch Agreed. Or spelled how they sound (wtf "colonel" "choir" and "meme"??)

    • @suzygeysen1628
      @suzygeysen1628 Před 5 lety +5

      Evan, happy to hear someone else noticed it too.... It made me cringe....

    • @thomson872
      @thomson872 Před 5 lety

      @@suzygeysen1628 Me, too...

    • @daddy2299
      @daddy2299 Před 5 lety +2

      Right! If you are going to ridicule such things at least have the intelligence to pronounce your words properly.

  • @waggishsagacity7947
    @waggishsagacity7947 Před 5 lety +70

    That Jane Austen and her characters (in "Pride & Prejudice," for example) were VICTORIAN comes as news to me: Jane Austen died in 1817, whereas Queen Victoria was crowned in 1837. Hmmm.

    • @sillypuppy5940
      @sillypuppy5940 Před 3 lety

      The manners carried over from the regency period, if not the fashions.

  • @our3acrehomestead
    @our3acrehomestead Před 8 lety +427

    Is it me or is the side table leaning?

    • @GG1783
      @GG1783 Před 8 lety +4

      waiting for it to fall any minute!

    • @ursine121
      @ursine121 Před 8 lety +7

      +watuwaitn4 It probably wasn't a good Ikea. Still, it distracts from the fabric on the sofa...

    • @tomatensalat7420
      @tomatensalat7420 Před 8 lety +4

      +watuwaitn4 I didn't even notice it :D

    • @LibraGamesUnlimited
      @LibraGamesUnlimited Před 8 lety +1

      +watuwaitn4 No and yes.

    • @ImehSmith
      @ImehSmith Před 8 lety +4

      +watuwaitn4
      The table is leaning on purpose. It looks like an "artistic design" done on purpose to make it look like the table is leaning sideways.

  • @sinicide1015
    @sinicide1015 Před 8 lety +119

    One etiquette I have always disliked. Walking past a co-worker..or an acquaintance. They say "Hi (insert name), how are you today?" I have no problem with saying hello back. But the "how are you" part annoys me because I can't say "I'm having a shitty day. How about you?". I could say the usual "I'm great!" But sometimes that is a lie and I hate lying, plus most of the time the person you're passing in the hall really doesn't care. It's like we are trained to ask. Now keep in mind we are both still walking to our separate destinations. So as I say "Great, how about you?" I am now pretty much talking to their back so if they want to answer they have to turn around or just yell behind themselves. But let's say they are not having a great day. Then what? I'm on my way someplace presumably important. I can't just stop to ask why. One, I don't have time, or two I don't care. I just think the "How are you?" part should be deleted. But if I don't ask them in return I feel as if it's rude not to ask since they asked me...-sigh-

    • @smokey1255
      @smokey1255 Před 8 lety +10

      I was taught that proper etiquette in first half of the 20th century included the speaking should be a limited and quiet undertaking. Many customs and practices were developed to limit. In those days gentlemen wore Hamburg or Fedora. Consequently, the situation you describe requires only a brief removal of the hat. I think the proper hat is beginning stylish again. You can nod your head if you are not wearing a hat and women can do the same. There a number of rules shaping hat use and if you were ever in the military, you probably already know them.
      About behaving like a gentleman, there are really just a few guidelines to follow. 1.) Actually become a gentleman ontologically. Once you become a gentleman in your heart, the guidelines are not an onus but rather an opportunity. 2.) A gentleman ALWAYS puts the other person first: first piece of pie, first merge into traffic, first in line etc. Even in an argument, a gentleman does not abandon his point but, rather tells the other person he understands how he came to his point and thanks the other person for the opportunity to learn something new. Perhaps good etiquette has a moral basis in how we should treat and take care of each other.

    • @osighri
      @osighri Před 8 lety

      Same fam

    • @Tippy2forU
      @Tippy2forU Před 8 lety +1

      Why can't you tell them you are having a shitty day? If it is because of work, you might find someone who may be able to help you if you tell them what's wrong.

    • @Zajin13
      @Zajin13 Před 8 lety +11

      Well, actually you are not supposed to answer the question "How are you?" in a greeting. The proper way to answer would be to ask back with "How are YOU?". Atleast that is the way the British layed it down. Here in Germany the proper etiquette would be to answer with a short sentence, stating that you are well even if it's not the case because it would be rude to not answer the question but also to state that you are having "a shitty day". But then again in Germany you are also not supposed to ask any personal questions (also concerning their well being) to a person you just met or with which you don't have a closer, personal friendship. We Germans are more of the "Lets start with the weather topic" type of guys.

    • @Tippy2forU
      @Tippy2forU Před 8 lety +5

      +Zajin13: I have never heard of that. Here in America we respond with either fine and you or not too well.
      America wanted to get as far away from British rule as we could so most of our actions was an act of rebellion. We turned our nose up at everything British.

  • @sciencelover80
    @sciencelover80 Před 6 lety +669

    I wish men and women were respectful for each other today's day too.

    • @moondancer3157
      @moondancer3157 Před 6 lety +38

      So do I...BUT not just on the surface!!

    • @KellyMcnelly333
      @KellyMcnelly333 Před 5 lety +28

      Believe me it's better now.

    • @qa8822
      @qa8822 Před 5 lety

      💝

    • @frankangelo1983
      @frankangelo1983 Před 5 lety +13

      I wish women could vote then.

    • @sorayaimperial
      @sorayaimperial Před 5 lety +29

      If you consider respect regarding a woman only as a womb for heir production, a man as a way to accessing his wealth, the younger brother as the failure of parents, and everyone below your social rank as utter trash. Sure. Respect.
      Victorian Era was marked by pretending to like people. False respect. Things that may seem cordial, such as a hat gesture to greet someone, could be done in a displicent or disrespectful way as to show your superior status. Sure, it looks like respect to greet everyone by taking off the hat or touching the tip of it, but it could be cruelly done so.
      Not to mention that Victorian Era was rampant with spousal abuse, sexual assault and child marriages due to their policy of wealth and appearing well mannered. Ah. The age of respect.

  • @lizgalvanoharshbarger4369
    @lizgalvanoharshbarger4369 Před 6 lety +373

    I WISH we were more inclined to manners now.

    • @Kiyoko504
      @Kiyoko504 Před 6 lety +5

      It's said the 1950s in terms of adequate won't return let alone 1830-1899

    • @orlandosanchez8123
      @orlandosanchez8123 Před 5 lety

      Liz Galvano Harshbarger we are

    • @Dirty_Squirrell
      @Dirty_Squirrell Před 5 lety +1

      @@Kiyoko504 I bet it will. It's predicted we will go back to less familiar behavior between genders. There will be a few things happening before that, but I'll leave what they are for a surprise.

    • @carojames6776
      @carojames6776 Před 5 lety +1

      Liz Galvano Harshbarger It is most unfortunate that those days are no longer with us.

    • @ilonabaier6042
      @ilonabaier6042 Před 5 lety +1

      yea but dont use the vitorians as a point of reference!!!!!

  • @Lizzy3D
    @Lizzy3D Před 8 lety +984

    I would love t for the smoking rule to still be active today haha

    • @aliceboldrini6247
      @aliceboldrini6247 Před 8 lety +26

      I'd be putting out everyone's cigars

    • @Mumsiken
      @Mumsiken Před 8 lety +46

      my husband of 15 years never smoked in my presence. he puts it out as soon as I step out . And he recently quit so I m on cloud 9

    • @jessielynch7493
      @jessielynch7493 Před 8 lety +2

      +Mumsiken I have been struggling to quit I have tried the patch gum pills I really need to quit I just got diagnosed with asthma how did your husband quit?

    • @billie-joesgimp7981
      @billie-joesgimp7981 Před 8 lety +7

      a good thing to remember about quitting anything is it took u a while to get addicted so it will take just as long to quit (if not longer). You are pretty much guaranteed to fail the first couple of times u try-that's ok. You have to learn how to handle cravings, social situations, stress & what to do with your hands. Before u know what yr triggers are U have to experience them so quitting really is a long term process not a decision u make & u've failed if u fall off the wagon. If u always have a smoke with coffee try drinking tea for a while. only smoke outside. If u do smoke inside keep yr cigs in another room so u have to get up each time u want another. I still smoke (only had 2 at work yesterday though) but I have kicked a meth addiction. The price of smokes is going thru the roof in my country (Australia is leading the charge on plain packaging & ultra high taxes on smokes- $35 for a pack of 40) so everyone is trying to quit.

    • @jessielynch7493
      @jessielynch7493 Před 8 lety +3

      Billie-Joes Gimp I usually roll mine so I don't feel the financial pinch maybe I should start buying prerolled to start feeling it I also have quit a cocaine addiction 17 years ago so I know I can quit something very addicting but I will definitely start smoking outside (I also live on the third floor so yeah that will help a lot)

  • @ligerwolf
    @ligerwolf Před 8 lety +1778

    LMAO *pose* "TRAAAAAASH" ahahah

    • @user-bh6yj7df9r
      @user-bh6yj7df9r Před 8 lety +19

      Ikr, I just about died

    • @Lorenzio88
      @Lorenzio88 Před 8 lety +19

      I nearly spit out my coffee with that. X'D
      I would definitely be a spinster though.
      Not too fond of the menfolk in terms of romance... or... anything else.
      If you were in a high class and had enough money, I don't see spinsterhood as being anything but good.

    • @mackenziehmusic
      @mackenziehmusic Před 8 lety +19

      I had to rewatch it, I couldn't not

    • @MsMtheory
      @MsMtheory Před 8 lety +6

      Ya 😂😂😂

    • @nerdybookluv1312
      @nerdybookluv1312 Před 8 lety +16

      It's the main reason why I liked this video!😂

  • @jonquilgemstone
    @jonquilgemstone Před 6 lety +243

    I deeply apologize if this offends you, but please research more thoroughly before making an informative video such as this one. Lack of accuracy lowers your credibility and lessens the benefit of humor.
    With just a little more knowledge, this video would have been splendid! However, even someone with only a basic understanding of Victorian etiquette (such as myself) could see the low amount of effort put into the subject, despite your presentation.

    • @princessturandot1659
      @princessturandot1659 Před 5 lety +16

      Jonquil Gemstone
      Very well said!!!

    • @jessica-fcm
      @jessica-fcm Před 5 lety +78

      Your critique would seem much more substantial if you would kindly point out the specific errors you happened to notice throughout the video (and make the necessary corrections), instead of merely making a general statement regarding the inaccuracy of the information being displayed. Best regards my dear

    • @alys4570
      @alys4570 Před 5 lety +28

      Is this how people argued back then? Lol...Best wishes ☕️

    • @lfields07
      @lfields07 Před 5 lety +17

      I just wish ONE of the video clips were of the correct time period.

    • @ItsJustM3lissa
      @ItsJustM3lissa Před 5 lety +6

      I died when she mispronounced "viscount"... yikes.

  • @heatheralysemua1949
    @heatheralysemua1949 Před 6 lety +70

    I wish you'd pay more attention to the fact that that end table is about to crumble, sis.

    • @nicoleraheem1195
      @nicoleraheem1195 Před 5 lety +1

      🤣🤣🤣😂That Was The First Thing I Had Noticed

  • @bluesow
    @bluesow Před 8 lety +480

    Actually, the cigar rule sounds pretty good. Better than today when a guy would blow cigarette smoke in a girl's face when talking to her and make her choke!

    • @sacuki2151
      @sacuki2151 Před 8 lety +5

      +Jackie LaGeek and what is more ugly when smoking person is a woman!!

    • @Jemalacane0
      @Jemalacane0 Před 8 lety +36

      +Jackie LaGeek I have a better idea: Lets not smoke tobacco period!

    • @ineptDolls
      @ineptDolls Před 8 lety +11

      +Jackie LaGeek this was probably done in the same line of reason as forbidding cussing in front of women, which is bullshit. But in practice, I guess the women ended up with healthier lungs :P

    • @SavitarTheSurfingGod
      @SavitarTheSurfingGod Před 8 lety +10

      +ineptDolls Eh not really, i am no expert on the Victorian area but considering they threw waste into the streets and coal was used for well a lot of things the air was pretty foul not to mention hygiene from that era also it's likely cigars contained tobacco then not chemicals all the smog from coal furnaces and such meant the air could get pretty foul also the Thames was so polluted it caused a miasma to settle into London quite often it certainly wasn't a pleasant place for the lungs to be i guess that is where going to the country for the fresh air came from when someone was sickly. They say corsets or female hysteria were why women swooned and fainted so much then i have to wonder if it wasn't the horrible air quality in town.

    • @spookyscaryscouticus8847
      @spookyscaryscouticus8847 Před 8 lety +8

      +Savitar The Surfing God Actually the fainting spells of the Victorian women came from the expectation of women to be dainty. What's daintier than passing out at something gross? Fucking nothing.

  • @killphaser25
    @killphaser25 Před 9 lety +213

    I like how people were shy and respectable to their women and in general back then. Their etiquette is very appealing. Nowadays people are extremely shameless and horribly rude. I disagree with this video. Thumbs down

    • @siran424
      @siran424 Před 9 lety +96

      Lawstidentity They were only shy and respectable to women in front of watchful eyes. It was all a farce. People have always been the same, it's just that they are now more open about it.

    • @jelkel25
      @jelkel25 Před 9 lety +15

      +zpardus You're talking more during the Georgian era or earlier with the kidnapping or torture of poor women, though they did force women (and men) into sex with threats of terminating individuals or even whole families employment or patronage (if you were middle class). If a woman became pregnant she was often thrown out on the street and deemed a whore by this ''respectable'' rich family. It was perfectly fine for the male upper classes to go to the seedier parts of cities (married or unmarried) and drink, take drugs, gamble, attend animal blood sports and frequent prostitutes as long as they were back Monday morning, suited and booted and didn't let their 'activities' effect their social standing. It was the middle classes who were often the prudish part of society though there was a strong temperance and religious revivalist movement among the working classes also.

    • @jelkel25
      @jelkel25 Před 9 lety +19

      Laurel VanBlarcum There's less hooped skirts now.

    • @jelkel25
      @jelkel25 Před 9 lety +8

      Laurel VanBlarcum I wonder if they were to keep sweaty, drunken, randy toff's at arms length? If so, a small price to pay!!!

    • @andreatomassini202
      @andreatomassini202 Před 8 lety +4

      +zpardus rich was, and still is not enough, the keyword is high-class.

  • @dierdrecole8027
    @dierdrecole8027 Před 6 lety +207

    Don't you love when these people try so hard to be funny and just turn out annoying? Anyways I was too distracted by that leaning side table to be totally put off.

    • @sneakyboo79
      @sneakyboo79 Před 5 lety +9

      That leaning table irritated me too. Just happened upon this video and wish I didn't

    • @nanachan0709
      @nanachan0709 Před 5 lety +29

      She is just irritating. She's a good presenter if only she could tone down on her "humor" that's not so funny. Sad on how she's trying to hard but falls short. And sadly no matter how they stop viewers from bashing the host, it can't be helped. I'm not the type to comment on videos, but when i saw her i just HAD TO.
      But anyway, the video is still informative. Just not really fan of the host.

    • @whodatbitch
      @whodatbitch Před 5 lety +10

      Then don't watch her fucking videos, genius. She doesn't make them for YOU.

    • @lindacirulli-burton9476
      @lindacirulli-burton9476 Před 5 lety +1

      Lara Lin (

    • @Ryan-pg1tw
      @Ryan-pg1tw Před 5 lety +5

      you should be more respectful i think

  • @ecclestonsangel
    @ecclestonsangel Před 6 lety +254

    Excuse me....The s in viscount is silent. It is pronounced vi(as in violets) count. You are pronouncing it phonetically. And contrary to popular belief, women didn't have as much difficulty getting around in corsets and crinoline cages (aka hoop skirts) as you think they did. First of all, as long as the corset was well made and laced properly, the lady could go about her day just like we modern women. Secondly, the crinoline cages, aka hoopskirts, were of a very lightweight metal, covered in cloth and designed to be collapsible, so they weren't as difficult to get around in as people think. Ladies were even able to "take care of business" pretty much the same way we do today. I would suggest taking most of this with a grain of salt. Besides, what's wrong with manners? It's something we're sorely lacking in these days.

    • @mjhoop5141
      @mjhoop5141 Před 6 lety +13

      "very lightweight metal"? Wrong century.
      The frames were made from whale bone. A little research will no doubt show that those cages came in when the whaling-ship corporate owners were trying to figure out how to make money on the bones of the whales they hunted for their oil, used in lamps, which replaced candles and burning torches. The knee bone is connected to the hip bone, and all that........

    • @twistedstich
      @twistedstich Před 5 lety +19

      I'm assuming you haven't worn Victorian whalebone corsets regularly, like I have. I guarantee you, you would not think they were as amenable if you have, particularly over bust corsets, which leave little room for breathing with the Victorian's ideal waist size. Even if you have laced a corset 'only four inches,' it is still constricting, uncomfortable, and difficult to perform normal tasks, like bending over to pick something up. Modern women do yoga, modern women, lift, modern women work at desks all day. Modern women also like tying their own shoes, which, in a corset, is almost impossible, unless you do yoga.

    • @alyssaw750
      @alyssaw750 Před 5 lety +11

      Why do you think so many women of that time fainted?.... Because they were always on the precipice of being out of breath because of their tight clothing.

    • @Mansellyn
      @Mansellyn Před 5 lety +10

      Whale bone would be as harsh as the metal stays. Renaissance clothing usually has metal stays in the corsets. I feel comfortable in mine because I do not pull the waist too tight. I say that because I grew up watching older ladies maintain wearing their stays, which at the time I incorrectly called girdles. We all knew that the boning was called "stays" and that was the word we used. Still, women of the time still clung to the notion that being pulled in was quite the thing. Recent studies have shown that the stays worn during the Victorian era were quite tightly laced. Holding onto a post of one's bed was an easy way of holding your own against the pulling of strings until the stays were held correctly. So was a good sturdy chair. Women's organs were shoved up into their chest area creating a hardship in the lungs and shoved down into the abdominal area where the bowels and bladder could be affected, never mind the bones used to cradle an infant while in womb. Still, the stays of today can offer support. And, most importantly we shouldn't discount how many males wore these same stays. Men have often worn stays or girdles to help hide their age and bellies. Fashion can be a harsh mistress, indeed.

    • @janrees4887
      @janrees4887 Před 5 lety +9

      Women definitely did often have problems getting around in crinolines.
      Some were even burnt to death just by walking too close to the fire because their clothes were extremely flammable and hard to get out of.
      There are also plenty of stories of ladies getting stuck in their crinolines when the wind turned them inside out or they just stumbled.
      Also, with all the petticoats and underwear they could end up with many kilograms of clothing.
      I've had to wear a crinoline and corset and it was extremely uncomfortable and made it very difficult to navigate stairs and narrow hallways.
      Even just turning around in a narrow space is difficult and at the time walking in the country often meant climbing over stiles which was almost impossible.
      The biggest problems started when working women started wearing crinolines. Especially factory workers who had to weave in and out of huge complicated machines like looms.
      And they were also a huge nuisance in the rain because they were even heavier when wet and took ages to dry so women would freezing cold in winter if they got wet on the way to an evening at the theatre where there wasn't much heating.
      But the most difficult thing was fitting 3 or 4 ladies in huge crinolines into a carriage.
      They had to squeeze themselves in, be uncomfortable during the whole journey, especially if they were grand ladies on a long journey because they couldn't just wear something more comfortable like pants for a journey and then the stressed crinolines would suddenly expand when they got out of the carriage and had to try to step down.
      And all this was in conjunction with an extremely tight and restrictive corset which didn't allow you to relax your posture for one minute.
      Some school girls were strapped into their corsets all week long, including during the night while in bed.
      They were allowed to be taken out of their corsets (which they couldn't even get out of by themselves) for ONE HOUR on a Saturday to allow them to "attend to their ablutions", ie. they could only have one bath a week because they couldn't take off their corsets at any other time.
      It was also very difficult to use a toilet.
      And if you were menstruating it was incredibly difficult to change the bandages which were attached to a garter belt type garment so hygiene was very difficult indeed.
      Windy days, muddy streets, fires, carriages, narrow winding staircases and unlevel ground (which abounded in Victorian London while the sewers and underground trains were being built) were all very challenging obstacles.

  • @matthewsexton5490
    @matthewsexton5490 Před 8 lety +472

    One time I used a dinner fork to eat my salad. I'm just wild & crazy like that.

    • @matthewsexton5490
      @matthewsexton5490 Před 8 lety +8

      +spirals 73 No, not quite that wild & crazy. Let's keep our feet on the ground.

    • @thefaceofawsomeness491
      @thefaceofawsomeness491 Před 8 lety

      +spirals 73 It is easy, you just use the next farthest utensils from the plate for each course.

    • @thefaceofawsomeness491
      @thefaceofawsomeness491 Před 8 lety +7

      your waiter will know, just let them pour the wine first and follow their lead when refilling a glass. Oreos go with everything, I can't actually think of a scenario involving Oreos were you could go wrong.

    • @thefaceofawsomeness491
      @thefaceofawsomeness491 Před 8 lety +2

      ***** I actually chuckled at that :D

    • @thelegendaryblackbeastofaa115
      @thelegendaryblackbeastofaa115 Před 8 lety +10

      +Matthew Sexton I say, just yesterday, I arrived at dinner to find that my chair was a full two centimeters off center! I ordered the chamber maid sacked, and replaced her at once.

  • @ashamenai1659
    @ashamenai1659 Před 7 lety +528

    Maternity corsets were designed to support the back during pregnancy. Not as horrifying as you'd imagine. :)

    • @AKayfabe
      @AKayfabe Před 7 lety +110

      Laurin Shattersmith exactly! They did NOT crush the fetus, my god. Like rich men would even risk crushing their new male heir to throne!!

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe Před 7 lety +11

      i don't think women could hold bad gas with those .

    • @elizabethrose92
      @elizabethrose92 Před 7 lety +57

      Just like you can get pregnancy spanx today and many large-chested women still use corsets to take the burden off their back and shoulders. People take things out of context.

    • @azadalamiq
      @azadalamiq Před 6 lety +24

      ya i know learned a lot from watching a period dress youtuber. she shows of REAL outfits back then. nithing was cumbersome and tight. It was light and clean. the corset was an early bra befire bras they wors a under shirt and under shorts that had a pee/poo hole. then the corset then the cril* then the petticoat then the 2 layers of dresses all made from linen abd cloth very light and very breathable. our fabric is heavier by comparrison with all the synthetic bs.

    • @princessfartypants32ballet21
      @princessfartypants32ballet21 Před 6 lety +3

      Asha Dice Lich I thought it was to disguise pregnancy

  • @karenb7464
    @karenb7464 Před 6 lety +32

    Talking about corsets as etiquette is like saying that a woman wears a bra today due to etiquette and has nothing to do with keeping her...well breasts in place. Of course women were wearing them everywhere.
    I do wish there were rules for dressing today then I would not be forced to see people wearing pajamas all day in public

    • @violetopal6264
      @violetopal6264 Před 4 lety +5

      Also the idea of tight lacing corsets is a myth. - or only the very fashionable crazy teenagers with nothing to do. A proper fitting corset would not be any tighter fitting than modern underwear

    • @sanayakhan2042
      @sanayakhan2042 Před 3 lety +2

      Username checks out

    • @softmodality
      @softmodality Před 3 lety +1

      @@sanayakhan2042 LMA0

  • @veralidaine97
    @veralidaine97 Před 6 lety +22

    God I wish corsets were cheaper to make! One day, I dream of replacing every thrice-cursed bra I have with a wonderful, comfy corset! To never have to wear a bra again. . . One day!

    • @Parz_Moon_Water
      @Parz_Moon_Water Před 5 lety +4

      I wish there were 'live' corset and petticoat shops. Trying to buy proper ones off of the internet is incredibly annoying.

    • @monafinlayson4637
      @monafinlayson4637 Před 4 lety +2

      I'd rather wear stays.

    • @featherquill9476
      @featherquill9476 Před 3 lety +1

      Ah yes! To no longer worry about slouching because a garment created for support is actually doing its job! (Ps, I also love stays, someday I'll wear one!)

    • @thisismyname3328
      @thisismyname3328 Před 3 lety

      I'm making some stays for myself (whilst watching this), as the back pain got too intense, and its not actually that expensive, if you know how to sew. I rented a book (patterns of fashion 5, if you're wondering), copied a pattern, and went about making 'mock-ups.' Honestly, £10 of calico later, and i have the pattern done, and fitting me perfectly. For boning, zip ties (cable ties) work brilliantly, or maybe even some wool for cording. A packet of needles, some threads and grommets, and I have an almost complete pair of stays, for about £50, in all, not including labour costs. You don't need a machine, just a needle, some fabric and some spare time.

    • @featherquill9476
      @featherquill9476 Před 3 lety

      @@thisismyname3328 Wow, this is amazing, thanks so much! How tedious was it? I'd love to know more about your process!

  • @KathleenAnlage
    @KathleenAnlage Před 8 lety +152

    NO!NONONO those are HOOP SKIRTS! Crinoline is a type of fabric, still used today. It's stiff and when layered, creates the same look as hoop skirts, with more flexibility.
    If I am wrong, which I don't think I am, I'll gladly accept it. So please, what is your source?

    • @ashleycresswell25
      @ashleycresswell25 Před 8 lety +22

      A crinoline /krɪn.əl.ɪn/ is a stiffened or structured petticoat designed to hold out a woman's skirt, popular at various times since the mid-19th century. Originally, crinoline described a stiff fabric made of horsehair ("crin") and cotton or linen which was used to make underskirts and as a dress lining.
      By the 1850s the term crinoline was more usually applied to the fashionable silhouette provided by horsehair petticoats, and to the hoop skirts that replaced them in the mid-1850s. In form and function these hoop skirts were similar to the 16th- and 17th-century farthingale and to 18th-century panniers, in that they too enabled skirts to spread even wider and more fully.
      So yes, you were partly right. The Crinoline was the name they gave to the structure made from the material, it wasn't until later they started making the hoop skirts of of the material itself to make it easier for women to move

    • @seriouslyinsanediva
      @seriouslyinsanediva Před 8 lety +8

      +Kathleen Anlage you are completely right. I have spent 30 years in the fashion industry.

    • @seriouslyinsanediva
      @seriouslyinsanediva Před 8 lety +4

      +Ashley Cresswell The original type of crinoline was from horses hair and was also dyed at times and used to weave baskets. However in modern times they copied this material synthetically making it lighter and more flexible. Crinoline has been used to make the underskirts of gathered and ruffled skirts in the 50's and for ballet and theatre costumes. I myself wore some crinoline underskirts in the 60's as a little girl. They were also popular in making those colourful tout touts in the 80's
      www.liketotally80s.com/2013/10/80s-costume-cyndi-lauper/

    • @CausticEuphoria
      @CausticEuphoria Před 8 lety +8

      +Kathleen Anlage THANK YOU! I actually had to pause the video at that point and scroll down the screen to find someone who commented on this, just so I could like the comment. Thank you.

    • @ursine121
      @ursine121 Před 8 lety +4

      +Kathleen Anlage No, you are correct. Even I knew it too!

  • @wardogthemasterofwar
    @wardogthemasterofwar Před 8 lety +258

    Oh my god that's too much. That's too exhausting. The only thing I like is that approaching strangers wasn't normal. I hate when random people approach me. I wouldn't mind that social etiquette coming back.

    • @fearloathinginlasvegas
      @fearloathinginlasvegas Před 8 lety +8

      Whaat, why? You don't want to make friends??

    • @ADarkRomance
      @ADarkRomance Před 8 lety +16

      I wouldn't mind less encounters with male strangers tbh.

    • @therealnancybee710
      @therealnancybee710 Před 8 lety +19

      But when strangers do say something "stupid" to you, I hope you acknowledge it with at least a polite smile. I've seen people needlessly embarrassed when they've simply tried to make small talk to pass the time and have been rebuffed or ignored. I always feel so badly for them.

    • @warpnin3
      @warpnin3 Před 8 lety +2

      Enjoy it, Tove Lija, It won't last…:-)

    • @m1sh474
      @m1sh474 Před 8 lety +3

      That's not how it works, +The Real Nancy Bee. You shouldn't approach a stranger to bother him/her with nonsense, no matter what except in very few especial occasions where a small talk like you said could be welcomed.

  • @kimberlyrice4294
    @kimberlyrice4294 Před 6 lety +9

    You can pick up on a lot of these etiquette customs when you read period authors, such as Austin, or one of the Bronte sisters.
    For example, young ladies were never to allow their preference for a particular young man to be known to others in their social circle. It was considered to be a lack of control, and particularly forward. Besides, if the feelings weren’t reciprocated, and advanced by the young man, you were considered “used”; a silly, wonton creature.
    Next, no written correspondence - ever, unless you were formally engaged, with marriage bans read and published! That meant no love letters, notes, miniature portraits, or locks of hair kept as prescious mementos.
    Dancing. Dancing was considered very erotic and young ladies held cards in which they would write the names of the young men who’d asked them for a particular dance. The dances were also quite complicated with intricate steps and few mastered them all. Ladies were expected to spread their favor equally amongst the men, showing no one any particular favor, although it was acceptable to have more than one dance with the same young man.
    Naturally, it goes without saying you were never to be alone with a member of the opposite gender. Anything could happen and anything could be claimed!
    A spotless and impeachable reputation was everything, and one wrong word could turn to scandal!
    Lastly, can you believe that at one time all proper young ladies wore gloves to bed and slept with their hands Outside the bed covers?! 😉🤭

    • @carmensavu5122
      @carmensavu5122 Před 5 lety

      That sounds absolutely horrible. I'm sure glad I don't live in those times.

    • @mijuajua4820
      @mijuajua4820 Před 5 lety

      Gloves on while sleeping?? I guess they didn’t want them to rub one off?😲

  • @davestrider4973
    @davestrider4973 Před 6 lety +30

    1) Unpopular opinion, but I do adore this specific rule. I still believe my personal outfits should follow these rules, although occasional accidents and current society think they say otherwise.
    2) It was a time of status and pride. This is only to be expected.
    3) You must be appropriate. It is still the way to be a gentleman, if you truly wish to win someone’s heart, you must be genuine.
    4) Overdoing it, but i see what they mean, both in present and in past.
    5) Yet, this is one of the worse factors. Duty means doing the things your heart may well regret, even to this extent.
    This took me three rewatches to write because I didn’t want to repeat exactly what you were saying in the video, even that’s majoritarily explicitly what I stand for

    • @gizemgonenc5342
      @gizemgonenc5342 Před 3 lety

      "Duty means doing things your heart may well regret." Did you just quote the song from Barbie's Princess and Pauper? Also, I agree with what you say.

  • @MysticOceanDollies
    @MysticOceanDollies Před 7 lety +1163

    Am I the only one who wants a Victorian style dress?

    • @mariar.4893
      @mariar.4893 Před 7 lety +15

      MysticOceanDollies I need one

    • @cringetrashcan8828
      @cringetrashcan8828 Před 6 lety +10

      No

    • @kathleendragonpetal1885
      @kathleendragonpetal1885 Před 6 lety +17

      MysticOceanDollies www.priorattire.co.uk/ourshop/ It's in the uk but they have awesome Victorian dresses and stuff that goes with them so idk but they're really cool

    • @dustyfan
      @dustyfan Před 6 lety +5

      MysticOceanDollies NOPE!!

    • @camijoy3001
      @camijoy3001 Před 6 lety +10

      I own a few since I’m a reenactor. It’s quite fun 😂

  • @geymim4630
    @geymim4630 Před 7 lety +618

    just close your mouth when you chew that's all I ask

    • @crystalperkins8952
      @crystalperkins8952 Před 7 lety

      masvale SOLA ikr 😂

    • @shannonmiller8144
      @shannonmiller8144 Před 7 lety +13

      May I add "Don't pick your nose or pass gas at the table"?

    • @oh6489
      @oh6489 Před 6 lety +6

      The Sniper that’s so annoying though it make people sound like fucking pigs

    • @animalgirl4237
      @animalgirl4237 Před 6 lety

      Geymi M ikr

    • @beefortebrea9386
      @beefortebrea9386 Před 6 lety +9

      Karynna Hills it's not really the sound, but the SIGHT of the food being chewed up in their mouths that looks gross to me

  • @linoleluminum2017
    @linoleluminum2017 Před 6 lety +5

    Any etiquette is better than none like modern-day America

    • @daintymoondancer2797
      @daintymoondancer2797 Před 6 lety

      darlin one I prefer the etiquette of the past to today's so called "etiquette".

  • @sociocomm724
    @sociocomm724 Před 5 lety +7

    What etiquette do I hate? Well as a man in 21st century America...I don't really think there are many rules I need to follow, other than ones I impose against myself. Like dressing respectably, sitting with my legs crossed, not wearing too much cologne...all that good stuff. But some etiquette rules I would like to see return (at least in America where they've long since died) are not slurping one's soup or drink, not belching in public, not filling "the mouth to it's utmost capacity" or indeed chewing with the mouth open, humming, heavy breathing whilst eating...or something that I've seen both men and women do that has put me off my meal...talking with the mouth full of food. Oh and here's a good one I think we all should practice, when one comes over to another's home, they do not simply expect that the owner clean up after them, they ask if they might help and indeed do pick up after themselves. These might just be pet peeves of mine that I impose on others but honestly...are they so bad?
    Edit: Just remembered another thing that should be social etiquette...this might heavily qualify as a first world type of a problem...However! A person should ask if they might buy something for another. Maybe it's just me and I dislike receiving surprise gifts (even at Christmas and on my Birthday) but I find it an unnecessary burden to deal with. If there is something that I actually need, then by all means, buy it for me. But people getting gifts because they think I would "just love it" or because they are obligated for those above mentioned holidays, is something I could do without. I have a small enough home as it is and I don't have room for random trinkets that I would be forced to keep just to not offend the person who gave it to me. Can we just stop this obligatory consumerism? It's creating hoarders.

    • @mplwy
      @mplwy Před 5 lety +1

      You remind me of Sheldon Cooper, especially with the gifts. 😁😉

    • @sociocomm724
      @sociocomm724 Před 5 lety

      @@mplwy I get that a lot...I guess I'm just weird. Or it's part of my antisocial behavior. Who knows.

  • @nunyabiznez6381
    @nunyabiznez6381 Před 7 lety +348

    As a historian I find it amusing when people speak of historical periods with little understanding of those periods. The entire video applied only to the upper 5% of Victorian British society. These rules of etiquette for the most part, didn't apply to the other 95% other than that they were completely rejected but the upper 5%.

    • @goodgirlkay
      @goodgirlkay Před 7 lety +5

      nunya biznez I had the same thought.

    • @janfranklin2114
      @janfranklin2114 Před 7 lety +9

      Yes, mostly the Regency period.

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe Před 7 lety +7

      TRRRR_AAAAASHHHHH!!!!

    • @lasangnana
      @lasangnana Před 7 lety +13

      do u have any good documentaries u could suggest?? I love learning history but its hard to find any good books and such nowadays

    • @JCastro-ex4pc
      @JCastro-ex4pc Před 7 lety +5

      nunya biznez I agree with your comment but in my opinion, it's a sad reality of the rich being praised while the poor are rarely looked or even just ignored. I bet 100 years from now, the rich and famous will be looked at to see how people lived in the early 21st century more than most of the people under them. But that's just me...

  • @Bluemilk92
    @Bluemilk92 Před 7 lety +330

    My knee jerk reaction is to call this stupid *but* for the socially awkward (like me) the strict rules would really eliminate any guess work. Turn a social interaction from an exercise in charisma, into a basic memory quiz and nerds will suddenly become pro's of the party scene... Oh, *now* I see why this came about in Britain ;)

    • @shaniquamichaux1422
      @shaniquamichaux1422 Před 7 lety +32

      Bluemilk92 it would relieve a lot of anxiety too to know how to act properly around people.

    • @yasmin7903
      @yasmin7903 Před 6 lety

      I am a bit socially awkward and I never seem to remember the few rules we have today, so no thanks.

    • @laceandbits
      @laceandbits Před 5 lety

      yasmin7903 But you would have been brought up with them so it would be natural behaviour for you. But in the same way as most schools in the UK still have a school uniform so that avoids the expensive school fashion competition taking place, as others have said it was a leveller to some extent in a class competitive society.
      I am sure that it wasn't unique to the UK either, the founding fathers class society, along with old and new money existed in America and similar ways of being put into a class society was in most if not all countries - hence the rise of communism although that didn't solve the problem either, it just pretends that it does.

  • @tabathaswinburne4314
    @tabathaswinburne4314 Před 6 lety +6

    I wish the ‘not playing on your phone at the table’ rule didn’t exist

  • @JCDenton2012Modder
    @JCDenton2012Modder Před 6 lety +5

    As an introvert I find this both quaint and exhausting.

  • @PhilJonesIII
    @PhilJonesIII Před 8 lety +306

    Sitting on a sofa in the jeans and t-shirt uniform of the 21st century. Mocking previous generations in this way is the equivalent of measuring our times using copies of 'Cosmopolitan', 'Esquire' and 'Country Life'.
    Rather than mocking, why not stand back and look at these women who, despite their corsets and hoops, still managed to scale the Alps, travel the world in conditions most of us would not countenance and go skinny-dipping in Lake Leman. A lot of those women had balls bigger than most men today and reading the exploits of the likes of Isabella Bird and Isabel Arundell ( wife of Richard Francis Burton) you get the idea that the Red Bull Challenge started much much earlier.
    Most of the rest had lives that were pretty brutal. Women and small children (age 6 and up) working in mines (and close to naked). Corsets in factories? If you want to believe the equivalent of HR publicity for the time. Even Isabella Bird resolved to ride side-saddle only when passing through towns on her trip (alone) across America. I think the factory-girls might have lost or loosened the corsets.
    Take a closer look at life in the 21st century and you quickly realise that much the same controls work on us and we all comply.

    • @MeishaAthma
      @MeishaAthma Před 8 lety +14

      +Philip Jones A rather appropriate rant... However, one should consider the anaesthetizing value of a sense of humor.

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII Před 8 lety +14

      +Meisha You are right of course.
      Notice in a Welsh coal mine: ' Ladies, please remember that an exposed corset is a source of consternation and no small distraction to the gentlemen workers alongside you. Several have complained of the need to remove their neckties and mentally recite the Lord's Prayer which although appropriate, does affect productivity.' ( Yes I made that one up ) Most mine-workers could not read.

    • @MeishaAthma
      @MeishaAthma Před 8 lety +7

      Philip Jones T'is a source of consternation this illiteracy amongst them (gestures with his cognac sniffing nose). They do sing and dance rather spiritedly though - poor blighters.

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Před 8 lety +8

      +Philip Jones I was amused that Bruce Jenner was considered brave for dressing as a woman in front of cameras, when women dress as men every single day, everyplace, and nobody thinks anything of it.

    • @Jemalacane0
      @Jemalacane0 Před 8 lety +3

      +Philip Jones We just have slackers now who go into space.

  • @fantasyfiction101
    @fantasyfiction101 Před 8 lety +241

    I would actually like to try to wear a corset.

    • @thelegendaryblackbeastofaa115
      @thelegendaryblackbeastofaa115 Před 8 lety +2

      +fantasyfiction101 Try a back brace.

    • @soarrefly
      @soarrefly Před 8 lety +13

      +fantasyfiction101 They are awesome and I have a few. I was curious just like you and when I got one I didn't regret it for a second. Buy one and have fun!

    • @fantasyfiction101
      @fantasyfiction101 Před 8 lety

      8th child Where's a good place to get one?

    • @soarrefly
      @soarrefly Před 8 lety +10

      I'm so glad you asked :)
      Here's your guide, you can purchase a corset according to your body type and price range:
      thecorsetauthority.tumblr.com/brands
      Also take a peek at Lucy Corsetry, she has the most comprehensive and knowledgable guides to using corsets.
      lucycorsetry.com
      She has a CZcams channel too. I hope I helped!

    • @fantasyfiction101
      @fantasyfiction101 Před 8 lety

      Thanks!

  • @mrwednesday687
    @mrwednesday687 Před 6 lety +15

    Y'all wanna talk about a tight corset? Look up Violet Chachki death becomes her.

  • @annahill99
    @annahill99 Před 5 lety +6

    This comment section is WILD
    So many of you are saying how much better society was back in the day and how we’ve fallen so far.
    Don’t get me wrong, I love history. I’m a grad student specializing in Victorian studies, for Christ’s sake. But you’re all romanticizing this time period.
    Yeah, there were more “manners”, but also extreme poverty, widespread cruel working conditions, death from diseases that didn’t have a vaccine yet, no indoor plumbing or electricity, often insurmountable class stratification, and very little modern medicine. Women were legally property and you could be thrown in prison for being gay.
    But by all means, let’s go back to when people were mOrE pOLiTe

    • @costas91
      @costas91 Před 5 lety

      starsonfire in the Victorian era it was ok for the upper classes which is what most people romanticise but if you were poor you were either living in slums and dirt everyday or working in sweatshops for your daily living ! Often people romanticise the past but they don’t actually realise that the past had its own drawbacks as well !

    • @featherquill9476
      @featherquill9476 Před 3 lety

      I wholeheartedly agree. Although it hurts to see misconceptions in regards to dress and mannerisms, I do think it important to remember that they had their own set of problems. Notice how every era had something that made them "superior" and "inferior," though I admit I am guilty of forgetting my own principles regarding keeping in mind the cons of the time as you'll notice people nowadays have so many misconceptions that after correcting them you hardly scratch the surface of why that era no longer lives. God bless, from your sister in Christ ❤️

  • @cheesecake134
    @cheesecake134 Před 8 lety +325

    I found an old Edwardian etiquette book in a thrift store. The rules are hilarious and ridiculous. There is a chapter on proper dress that says a proper lady wouldn't DARE walk onto a public thoroughfare without gloves. To do so is "vulgar". VULGAR.

    • @cheesecake134
      @cheesecake134 Před 8 lety +12

      It's a lot of fun to read, especially the rules about dress and courtship.

    • @cheesecake134
      @cheesecake134 Před 8 lety +1

      ***** Thanks for the history lesson, grandpa. I would have never known any of this on my own.

    • @AlexandraLynch1
      @AlexandraLynch1 Před 8 lety +35

      +Gwen Heart You grow up with them. My mother remembers when ladies wore gloves and a hat when fully dressed. I grew up with all kinds of rules, and while times may have changed, I can't handle letting my bra straps show, contemplate wearing pajamas outside of the house, going without a bra except in the privacy of my bedroom, and the only way I'll wear jeans to church is when I'm going the day before to help set up for the fundraising dinner. (grin)
      It's all in what rules you grow up with.

    • @AlexandraLynch1
      @AlexandraLynch1 Před 8 lety +5

      No, because, well, strange person. You didn't even really touch members of your family that much. Different set of social norms.

    • @miask
      @miask Před 8 lety +19

      +AlexandraLynch1 I am old enough to remember wearing hat and gloves myself, though I was quite young.
      I also grew up learning proper etiquette and will not wear jeans or pants to church either. I think it's lovely that a young woman like you has such respect for herself and others that she follows "proper etiquette ".

  • @madmonkee6757
    @madmonkee6757 Před 9 lety +109

    I wish people would observe the reticence of speech in public a bit more.
    People are so damned trashy these days.

    • @sophienelisselover555
      @sophienelisselover555 Před 8 lety +7

      Yes agreed

    • @thefaceofawsomeness491
      @thefaceofawsomeness491 Před 8 lety +4

      +Mad Monkee Says the guy who just used the phrase "damned trashy." Simply "vulgar" could have done.

    • @madmonkee6757
      @madmonkee6757 Před 8 lety +2

      +Theface ofawsomeness "simply vulgar" doesnt begin to describe the people in North Carolina. Honestly, "damned trashy" doesn'[t either, but decorum forbids describing them properly.

    • @huskerhammer6325
      @huskerhammer6325 Před 8 lety +1

      +Mad Monkee The commoners anymore speak jibberish laced at best with jards of balderdash.

    • @howstuffworks
      @howstuffworks  Před 8 lety

      +Mad Monkee Right?? Whatever happened to class? czcams.com/video/3lAqKm1GY5Q/video.html

  • @Heartlessiceboy
    @Heartlessiceboy Před 6 lety +5

    In México the XV year celebration of a girl was similar to a "Presentation at court" It meant that the girl (A grown woman in that time) Was in the market. Today Mexican girls still have this famous "Quinceañera" parties...But after that they continue with their adolescent's life and school.

  • @angelg.8462
    @angelg.8462 Před 5 lety +14

    I like proper etiquette and good manners😁
    I can imagine myself in that era too! 😉

  • @RoseOfMadina
    @RoseOfMadina Před 8 lety +395

    These aren't actually ridiculous - they are only ridiculous when looked from a certain perspective. Can you imagine 100 years from now on, people making fun of our time? "Crazy things people did in the first quarter of the 21th century." I guess silly girls smacking makeup on their face on youtube and making lots of money for doing so, obsession with sexuality and perhaps Brexit will be included in that list. In their (Victorian) time these things weren't considered ridiculous, it was just the norm, the way society worked. We look through a certain set of morals/ way of thinking and living, back into time, and through these conclude things which would be abnormal if implemented in our current society. If a person in the 1950's would have to look back to the Vic. age and point out ridiculous things, I'm sure they would come up with a whoooole different list. It is just very subjective and I feel calling cultural norms 'ridiculous' is ridiculous in itself as well as a bit disrespectful.

    • @lorrilewis2178
      @lorrilewis2178 Před 8 lety +7

      Totally agree. It seems to be a millennial thing to do list of "ridiculous" things from other eras.

    • @dankhnw8
      @dankhnw8 Před 8 lety +3

      I know the era is kind of silly and strict( In my 21 century eye) but there is some beauty when you think about the time.

    • @dankhnw8
      @dankhnw8 Před 8 lety +2

      And I'm not being disrespectful, I think the same about how people thought and acted was a part of their norm just like we act think and act the way society expect us to.

    • @MsTendus
      @MsTendus Před 8 lety +12

      I honestly prefer a lot of the traditions from that time. I cannot stand how people now days just interact over social media and I would honestly prefer rules for social engagements maybe just because I am socially awkward. Plus I am pretty sure the Victorians would support brexit there is no way they would sign our rights away to the Europeans they have a bit of self respect.

    • @TickingClocks
      @TickingClocks Před 8 lety +2

      +Lorri Lewis is millennial a buzzword now

  • @rickroscoe4734
    @rickroscoe4734 Před 8 lety +66

    Of course, modern American customs are such a vast improvement over the olden days.

    • @guerra_dos_bichos
      @guerra_dos_bichos Před 8 lety +5

      +Rick Roscoe yeah, the personal space nation

    • @Cassiterit3
      @Cassiterit3 Před 8 lety

      +Rick Roscoe Especially the custom of women going to hotels by themselves. They couldn't travel alone in this era; they had to notify their place of stay that they would need an escort to go to and from the dining hall of the hotel while they were staying there, so she would not appear to be eating alone. Scandalous.

    • @rickroscoe4734
      @rickroscoe4734 Před 8 lety +11

      Katherine Pulliam - What a wonderful old custom. Then a man could be a "gentlemen" and escort a lady to dinner. I think I would have been happier in the old days. Modern world sucks for both men and women.

    • @Cassiterit3
      @Cassiterit3 Před 8 lety +6

      +Rick Roscoe You make a good point, but as a long-time traveler and having traveled alone a lot, I can't imagine being restricted in that way.

    • @rickroscoe4734
      @rickroscoe4734 Před 8 lety +2

      ***** - Laws against cohabitation haven't been enforced for more than 80 years. What in the hell are you talking about? I'm talking about the break down of cordiality between the sexes which has befuddled both sexes on how to behave with one another. Look at the extended period of time today before men and women marry and have children. If its "all about me", you are not going to have a very cohesive society. Just look around and you can see it, unless you are blind.

  • @Dirty_Squirrell
    @Dirty_Squirrell Před 5 lety +6

    The ''w'' is silent in the word sword.

  • @briganja
    @briganja Před 6 lety +61

    Love you and the "trash", hate the rules, but ultimately would be ok with the one where a dude can't speak to a dudette until she acknowledges him. But not if it means I have to wear a corset.

    • @Kat-fj1rx
      @Kat-fj1rx Před 5 lety

      I kinda want the birdcage and the corset

    • @lelekasa8564
      @lelekasa8564 Před 5 lety +3

      Corsets are actually not that bad. Many people think first about tightlacing, but that was not common. Also, they just gave a good support and were super comfortable because they were made for fitting especially your own body

    • @abbiemarie5419
      @abbiemarie5419 Před 4 lety +1

      Lelekasa 13 yes thank you! also another common name for them is stays!!

    • @thisismyname3328
      @thisismyname3328 Před 3 lety

      From what I'm aware, stays are earlier than Victorian corsets, disappearing by the 1840's. I might be wrong, but that's what I've heard.

  • @Liutgard
    @Liutgard Před 8 lety +184

    *sigh* Misspellings and mispronunciations tend to reduce your credibility...

    • @howstuffworks
      @howstuffworks  Před 8 lety +40

      +Laura Minnick We're an all-purpose team of researchers, writers, and performers here at HowStuffWorks; we're not experts in every topic that we host. We all try to check pronunciations before we record, but sometimes a couple that look obvious on paper slip past us. I'm sure you've had the experience of mispronouncing a word you've never heard aloud before. ^__^

    • @Liutgard
      @Liutgard Před 8 lety +27

      Well, I'd suggest that in your editing process (I assume you have one), that you check unfamiliar words with the dictionary, which usually has pronunciation cues. I understand knowing words and not hearing them- and that is what I do. It's useful, and makes you look more professional and credible.

    • @kkallebb
      @kkallebb Před 8 lety +25

      +HowStuffWorks Really? You offer an educational product to the public and you defend spelling mistakes and mispronunciations?

    • @RicharddtheStar
      @RicharddtheStar Před 8 lety +7

      +Flibbertigibbet6 shut the fuck up.

    • @howstuffworks
      @howstuffworks  Před 8 lety +23

      Laura, that's exactly what we do. Most of the time. This one slipped past us.
      +William S. Yep! We're human and we make mistakes. It's an important part of learning.

  • @scarletfluerr
    @scarletfluerr Před 8 lety +1560

    Do you realize your using films set in the Regency Period, not the Victorian?

    • @howstuffworks
      @howstuffworks  Před 8 lety +167

      +scarletfluerr Absolutely. We say so in the video's description. Our editor was in a bit of a crunch, and decided to use some footage from films set in the Regency and Edwardian eras as a stylistic shortcut.

    • @caseys.9248
      @caseys.9248 Před 8 lety +74

      +HowStuffWorks Was there a deadline involved to teach this to the world?

    • @mikecorbeil
      @mikecorbeil Před 8 lety +11

      +scarletfluerr Good reply or question, especially since HowStuffWorks agreed with you; but, it's still interesting that this weird sort of culture ever existed at all. It surely wasn't the sole werid period in human history, but I appreciate the contribution that you've made for this video.

    • @Kendrahf
      @Kendrahf Před 8 lety +34

      +Casey S. Dudette. Did you even watch this short? She said a season lasted from Jan to June and guess how close Jan is. That's right. Four days from the time you wrote this comment. Get with the times! We need to know this so we can snag a hubby-hubby.
      Thank you HowStuffWorks. It was a crunch to get this out in time for the new season but I appreciate it.

    • @johnmiller2290
      @johnmiller2290 Před 8 lety +6

      +scarletfluerr true, but most of these rules still applied in these periods

  • @dvgames3134
    @dvgames3134 Před 5 lety +10

    1:20 only for the people with some money. During Victorian times a lot of the population was struggling, sick or poor. It wasn't a nice time to live.

    • @_flow3rchild_718
      @_flow3rchild_718 Před 4 lety +1

      Actually it was worn every day among the working class. Theres different levels of poor, but a long as you weren't dirt dirt poor you would own a corset. Think of it as women owning bras today, theres cheaper ones and more expensive ones but most women wear them, even if they are poor.

  • @christinegallo4983
    @christinegallo4983 Před 5 lety +1

    1) corsets weren’t just about shrinking the waist, they were the time’s ieteration of a bra, simply supporting the bust from beneath rather than the shoulders. And they weren’t anywhere near new in the Victorian era. You can find various versions of them all across history, and as someone who has worn both historical corsets and bras (not together of course) I can attest that they aren’t nearly as uncomfortable as most people seem to think. Not to mention they smooth out the lines of the body, so you never have to worry about rolls😉
    2) crinolines were actually extremely liberating, holding the skirts away from the legs, allowing more range of movement than was allowed with the heavy soft petticoats of previous times. Also, they were self air conditioning! Great for summer.
    3) large crinolines weren’t popular for the entire era, but rather only a few decades, spread out by the natural form era, and the two bustle eras
    Please research more thoroughly before you make assumptions based on your own modern perspective

  • @ochibicake
    @ochibicake Před 7 lety +118

    Honestly can we bring some of these back

  • @StarpoBerry
    @StarpoBerry Před 7 lety +1129

    I like the rule where a guy can't talk to a lady unless she acknowledges him.

    • @xirar.s.9278
      @xirar.s.9278 Před 7 lety +105

      Star Berry In some cases, it would be better if the rule still existed

    • @ali_ozz1388
      @ali_ozz1388 Před 7 lety +17

      +Xira R. S. So true! that would make my Life so much easier:-)

    • @InvaderTak176
      @InvaderTak176 Před 7 lety +3

      What I love, is that we are doing that now....

    • @StarpoBerry
      @StarpoBerry Před 7 lety +8

      I mean....if you think that then....ok

    • @Shay45
      @Shay45 Před 7 lety +43

      Star Berry
      😒 um I don't. Sounds kind of sexist

  • @galubyovo4061
    @galubyovo4061 Před 5 lety +6

    The only thing I like about this is that I could go on the street without being catcalled.

  • @janrees4887
    @janrees4887 Před 5 lety +6

    Some of these rules actually sound quite appealing to me 😂

  • @056561022
    @056561022 Před 8 lety +674

    I would rather people followed the whole "don't talk to the lady until she acknowledges you" etiquette a little more.... I get talked to by creepers WAAAAYYYY more often than I like. D:

    • @illiminatieoverlordgurglek140
      @illiminatieoverlordgurglek140 Před 8 lety +20

      Yeah, well, feminists destroyed that for you. Rules like that existed because women were seen as delicate and precious. Now you're all equal, and therefore fair game. Lol.

    • @056561022
      @056561022 Před 8 lety +112

      ... ok... no. Let me explain basic human interaction to you and how society works from a human perspective.
      We are not objects to be chased, grabbed at, leered at, slobbered all over, and then tossed aside when you're done with us.
      We are people.
      Your mother was a person, whether a nice person or not, of that I'm sure.
      If you don't want your own mother being treated as an object by disgusting pigs because "they're now fair game" and they "aren't precious little flowers any more", then you're also a feminist, you just don't call yourself one.
      Feminists don't hate men, by the way. They believe that women are people too, and should be treated with the same amount of respect and freedom that men are accorded.
      One may address a stranger politely, and compliment them politely, and be on their merry way, that's fine.
      But there's a big difference between "BABY BACK THAT ASS UP ON MY DICK RIGHT NOW OR I'M GONNA CALL YOU FAT AND UGLY" and "My, what a lovely dress! You have a wonderful day now!"
      If those two things are both acceptable because "men"... then you're part of the problem.

    • @howstuffworks
      @howstuffworks  Před 8 lety +51

      Response of the Day, Amber.

    • @illiminatieoverlordgurglek140
      @illiminatieoverlordgurglek140 Před 8 lety +7

      Amber Snay Too long. Did not read. By the way I'll have ham on my sandwich, dear. Run along.

    • @056561022
      @056561022 Před 8 lety +73

      ... You *are* a ham, if you didn't read the entire thing.
      And trusting me with knives is a really dumb move since you don't know this, but I'm more proficient with weapons than you are with words.

  • @jafs65
    @jafs65 Před 7 lety +1777

    My mother in law each time I visit her 6:34

  • @chaiselatterly7003
    @chaiselatterly7003 Před 5 lety +4

    When sitting, you do not sit with your back comfortably resting at the back of your chair. Sit up properly means sit up.

  • @luckycavy1397
    @luckycavy1397 Před 5 lety +2

    Having worn a corset on several occasions I can confirm that they are actually more comfortable than modern shapewear, and twice as supportive.

  • @cliffdweller990
    @cliffdweller990 Před 8 lety +93

    "Pride and Prejudice" takes place at least 30 years before Victorian era.

    • @minabusiness
      @minabusiness Před 8 lety

      I was just thinking exactly the same thing

    • @chrissysky01
      @chrissysky01 Před 8 lety +3

      Yup. Regency era. Threw me right out of the rest of the video. Oh well.

    • @Pomiwi
      @Pomiwi Před 8 lety +4

      Agreed, wrong era movie clips and really great attitude. I actually found it offensive.

    • @thegayestgoth
      @thegayestgoth Před 7 lety +11

      She seemed hostile. And yeah, Pride and Prejudice was far before Victorianism.

  • @thiery572
    @thiery572 Před 8 lety +49

    4:00 If you want a man to talk to you, drop your handkerchief, so the man, if he is interested, would pick it up and give it back to you. You cannot offer him your hand, it is forbidden to touch hand someone you don't know.

    • @JamesRDavenport
      @JamesRDavenport Před 8 lety +22

      +thiery572 Someone did the same thing to me once when I was in college. Granted it wasn't her handkerchief, it was her pen and she kind of threw it at me so it would get there in time for me to pick it up, but it still worked. ;) lol

    • @thiery572
      @thiery572 Před 8 lety +6

      ***** Wow, lucky you. :)

    • @ShakeyHorse7788
      @ShakeyHorse7788 Před 8 lety +1

      +James Davenport cute

    • @FriedEggsWithChips
      @FriedEggsWithChips Před 8 lety +13

      +thiery572 Dropped a used snotty tissue once on the floor of a bar containing
      mostly men. No-one bothered to bend over and pick it up to give it
      back to me. One even gave me a dirty look, the filthy savage. Honestly,
      modern men and their bad manners!
      And why the fuck am I not married?

    • @thiery572
      @thiery572 Před 8 lety +1

      Hannah Lynne Maybe they feel insecure towards women. lol

  • @julia9557
    @julia9557 Před 5 lety +10

    Back when society was more civil

    • @monafinlayson4637
      @monafinlayson4637 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes although, killing people in the streets while people watched and classism wasn't nice.

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 Před 3 lety

      @@monafinlayson4637 Sadly, that's ALWAYS been a part of our societies, since antiquity. You can try to root out inner city crime and poverty as much as possible, but I don't think you can really ever fully stamp it out.

  • @TLBlack_moth
    @TLBlack_moth Před 5 lety +4

    “TRAAASH!” 🤣🤣🤣

  • @deepee3141
    @deepee3141 Před 7 lety +181

    With no Internet or TV, people had to pass the time making up and following these guidelines.

    • @deaded5040
      @deaded5040 Před 6 lety +2

      nooooo.... without Internet, tv, iPhones, and rap music they were actually a great deal smarter than the shit faced, no account, crap fest we have in society today

    • @deaded5040
      @deaded5040 Před 6 lety +3

      IN FACT let's send your candy ass back to that time and see how long it takes you to end up in an asylum from lack of technology!!!! XD LOL

    • @feyrol42
      @feyrol42 Před 6 lety +1

      STFU. You're complaining about the internet & tech yet you are on the internet. You are one of the people you're laughing at. Stop with the superiority complex

    • @lexh5121
      @lexh5121 Před 6 lety

      lol

    • @edmasterson4588
      @edmasterson4588 Před 5 lety

      also is the type to completely dismiss a whole genre of music probably never listens to. how do you know they were smarter? what defines "smart"?

  • @reverendmothercheryl2276
    @reverendmothercheryl2276 Před 8 lety +77

    One etiquette rule that I would greatly welcome is to not interrupt when someone is speaking. Interrupting someone when they are in the middle of a sentence shows that you're not listening to what they are saying or that you don't care and that you are too busy listening to the voices in your own head. It's extremely rude and disrespectful and Americans do it all the time!

    • @SivaH88
      @SivaH88 Před 8 lety +2

      ...or in middle of your speech someone turns 180 degrees away and starts yelling to other person.

    • @reverendmothercheryl2276
      @reverendmothercheryl2276 Před 8 lety +1

      I've had that happen too. My mother raised me to be much more polite and all of that training seems lost on so many. It's very sad.

    • @talap16
      @talap16 Před 8 lety +5

      That is very true! I hate when people interrupt me and then start talking about something else and it was as of i wasn't even speaking at all. I've had this argument with my family plenty of times now, because not only do strangers interrupt me but my parents as well. 😳 makes me feel like I'm too boring to be listened to for at least 2min

    • @reverendmothercheryl2276
      @reverendmothercheryl2276 Před 8 lety +3

      Thalia, I cannot add to what you have written. I know exactly how you feel. It's lead me to simply let people talk and keeping my opinions or comments to myself. Of course, this makes people think me aloof and unfriendly. I can't win.

    • @adrianaldridge2267
      @adrianaldridge2267 Před 8 lety +5

      I really hate when people interrupt me and I don't like to interrupt others but this can be difficult for people with ADD and ADHD as I have ADD I can sometimes not stop myself from talking in the middle of someone else's sentence. I do try and stop myself but sometimes I just blurt things out without realizing. It has gotten better as I've gotten older but I still do it very often. On the occasion I catch myself interrupting I try to stop but It can be very difficult.

  • @rosemarygriffin2184
    @rosemarygriffin2184 Před 5 lety +3

    Sword, you pronounce it without the W...... Sord !

  • @sweetwillow
    @sweetwillow Před 3 lety +1

    I think some of these rules still apply today like marrying in your class and only speaking to a man if the lady speaks first, but no one follows them and then they just end up having stressful marriages and relationships

  • @pissfrog
    @pissfrog Před 8 lety +17

    "you can't fight crime in a crinoline" is that a challenge

    • @howstuffworks
      @howstuffworks  Před 8 lety +3

      Only because we want to see it happen. (Also, we know that Gail Carriger, and Doctor Who's Madame Vastra & Jenny Flint, would disagree -- just for starters.)

  • @SosuCoyote
    @SosuCoyote Před 7 lety +22

    Even Victorian manners were an improvement over this woman's sarcastic narration.

  • @clover2556
    @clover2556 Před 5 lety

    The corset wasn’t just a common piece of clothing, it was functional. Bust support, a firmed torso to support many layers of skirts, and back support.

  • @monycajordan5925
    @monycajordan5925 Před 6 lety +272

    I think the dating rules are nice. people now let their kids boyfriend's/girlfriends sleep over, have no curfews and then have the nerve to wonder how they got pregnant. Sad

    • @meekz770
      @meekz770 Před 6 lety +9

      Mony Jordan omg ikr

    • @alexandriaisokay964
      @alexandriaisokay964 Před 6 lety +19

      That is true. Though it's been an issue before the 21st century. My grandma's strict on that stuff (which I agree with) yet, the irony is that she got pregnant at 17. It was more normal for people to have kids early in the past. Though still idiotic.

    • @user-wk2uf5yo7x
      @user-wk2uf5yo7x Před 6 lety +2

      @@alexandriaisokay964 was she wed when she had a baby?

    • @edmasterson4588
      @edmasterson4588 Před 5 lety +17

      "I think the dating rules are nice. people now let their kids boyfriend's/girlfriends sleep over, have no curfews and then have the nerve to wonder how they got pregnant. Sad" i've never met parents that allow that (yes i am sure some exist). you cant keep the training wheels on forever. it would be better to teach children responsibility for themselves and demonstrate how much an early/unwanted pregnancy can effect not only their whole life but their child's, and their family, etc. people have hormone and reproductive organs, even with the best education, etc not everyone is going to make "good" choices.

    • @Kiina312
      @Kiina312 Před 5 lety +13

      Mony Jordan
      By kids I’m sure you mean teenagers & as long as they are of consenting age & you have educated them on contraception - what’s the issue?
      I slept over my boyfriend’s house every weekend, never had a curfew and never got pregnant (or an STI) why? Because we were educated...
      I am aware however in some countries (like the USA) education on contraception isn’t the best so it’s unsurprising teenagers fall pregnant...

  • @MissPooslie
    @MissPooslie Před 6 lety +391

    Jane Austen is REGENCY
    , Downton is EDWARDIAN and you have some ROCOCO era paintings in there!! Otherwise good video though.

    • @USMarshmallow
      @USMarshmallow Před 5 lety +13

      MissPooslie I sometimes wonder if anything post-Revolutionary France is considered Victorian in some minds...

    • @Sawrattan
      @Sawrattan Před 5 lety +11

      I get the Regency problem, but in fairness Edwardian England was still very Victorian. It was the world wars and America that really destroyed the Victorian mentality

    • @clarissathompson
      @clarissathompson Před 5 lety +1

      The King or Queen is the Monarch and would be His/Her Majesty. The Queen/Prince Consort and Princes and Princesses would be HRH.

    • @abbycross90210
      @abbycross90210 Před 5 lety +2

      @@Sawrattan America destroyed the Victorian attitudes toward etiquette? Citations please.

    • @blue-and-blauw
      @blue-and-blauw Před 4 lety +2

      I mean that and the "crinolines are made out of steel", the picture of a corset without any sort of chemise under it, the hairstyles which are wrong even when portraying something that isn't victorian at all...

  • @kmeccat
    @kmeccat Před 8 lety +46

    The "W" is not pronounced in the word "sword". It is pronounced SORD.
    And actually, I'd like to see some etiquette make a comeback. It's gotten pretty ugly out there...

    • @oliviamontemayer7089
      @oliviamontemayer7089 Před 8 lety +4

      +kmeccat I agree with you on the etiquette thing. Although some rules were down right stupid others didn't seem so bad.

    • @breeezzinit
      @breeezzinit Před 8 lety +12

      And "viscount" is pronounced VYE-count.

    • @MsAngelique
      @MsAngelique Před 8 lety +1

      +kmeccat ... I'm pretty sure it's a regional thing.

    • @MPythonGirl
      @MPythonGirl Před 8 lety

      +Tinyfată Really? I always assumed it was a joke/reading thing. I mean... I know I've mispronounced things because I read them before I heard them.
      I've googled it... and it appears to be a thing random people do. I dunno.

    • @Sandra-yx6yp
      @Sandra-yx6yp Před 8 lety +2

      +kmeccat I agree with you 100%. No civility or social graces at all. It's very rude, crude, and coarse

  • @BarryLeePace
    @BarryLeePace Před 6 lety +12

    The more I listened the more I started to get ill...Funny these rules makes sense, look at the way things have turned out since we got rid of all this!

  • @pennyvanni
    @pennyvanni Před 4 lety +1

    Had to pause the video to say this, the "eyes that look at you and say.. Trrassh!" was perfect XD

  • @nein2883
    @nein2883 Před 8 lety +238

    i still LOVE the Victorian era

    • @Itachiuchiha85423
      @Itachiuchiha85423 Před 8 lety +7

      same

    • @jenniferkennedy1886
      @jenniferkennedy1886 Před 8 lety +13

      I 3rd that! I wish we had manners and attire like they had back then.

    • @maddieclarke258
      @maddieclarke258 Před 8 lety +5

      Same

    • @leonardodavinci4259
      @leonardodavinci4259 Před 8 lety +8

      Naaaah, you probably just love an edited version of it. From your profile picture, I can guess you're an anime fan (like me). You most likely enjoy the soft-core stuff like Blackbutler, the fashion, the romance...and such. But I don't think life then was easy enough for us to enjoy it!!

    • @leonardodavinci4259
      @leonardodavinci4259 Před 8 lety

      And how do you expect the bird cage to hold your entire body without crushing your ribs?

  • @willhulme2464
    @willhulme2464 Před 8 lety +72

    I lost it at the Viscount's mother part

    • @Zajin13
      @Zajin13 Před 8 lety +22

      "TRAAAASH!" ô_Ô

    • @DarkAnGeL14054
      @DarkAnGeL14054 Před 8 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂 lol

    • @CuteKidan18
      @CuteKidan18 Před 8 lety +1

      right same here

    • @thehermit8618
      @thehermit8618 Před 7 lety

      Gemathest Gemdone *firmly yet elegantly stirs tea with a spoon *
      .... *T R A S H*

  • @majesticafpenguin2669
    @majesticafpenguin2669 Před 5 lety +1

    2:11 that’s not Victorian, that’s regency. As is the clip afterwards. Not to nitpick, but I’m just pointing out a flaw. You’re information is great though, your effort really shows so keep up the great work!

  • @bernicerogers2383
    @bernicerogers2383 Před 5 lety +4

    I still don't put my knife in my mouth, overfill my mouth or talk when I'm eating.

  • @howstuffworks
    @howstuffworks  Před 8 lety +809

    Hey Internet humans! Thanks so much for all of the corrections you've been posting. It means a lot to us that you're passionate enough about history/the Victorian era/etiquette/pronunciation to speak out. However, please don't post comments personally insulting our host -- we don't tolerate bullying. Personal insults will result in being banned from commenting on our channel. (It's ironic that we'd have to ask this on a video about etiquette, no?)

    • @PaulineTriage
      @PaulineTriage Před 8 lety +27

      +HowStuffWorks Haha, you're obviously not familiar with the etiquette around youtube. If the person in the video is a woman, expect her to get insulted just cuz. And by "just cuz" I mean "Just cuz it seems like youtube is populated by an inordinately loud and hysterical pack of woman-haters." If you didn't want your host insulted, you should have hired a man. Grim fact.

    • @joannecarroll5504
      @joannecarroll5504 Před 8 lety +25

      +HowStuffWorks Agreed - however, the host constantly taking the piss out of people's accents isn't considered insulting?

    • @SAHBfan
      @SAHBfan Před 8 lety +6

      +Pauline Triage
      You think men don't get insulted on youtube?
      :-o

    • @PaulineTriage
      @PaulineTriage Před 8 lety +26

      SAHBfan
      I don't recall saying that, no. But they aren't insulted just for being men in the same way that women get insulted just for being women.

    • @heru-deshet359
      @heru-deshet359 Před 8 lety +47

      +HowStuffWorks My word! How dastardly of these cads! To affront the honor of a lady that aspires only to instill a modicum of decency in their humdrum existence. Per chance do they not know the stone that lies not in your road need not offend you? On occasion discretion is the better part of valor. Such Zounderkites and Fustilugs! It appears that empty vessels make the most noise.

  • @maggiebabcock9558
    @maggiebabcock9558 Před 7 lety +19

    Okay the "bird cadge thing" is actually called a hoop skirt Not a crinoline, a crinoline is an under skirt made of stiff fabrics but no bones ...

  • @hughleyton693
    @hughleyton693 Před 6 lety +17

    I grew up with these Etiquette Rules, although not so strict. You learn them and followed the logic behind them and society worked reasonably well. But now society is breaking down, so many no longer follow sensible society rules, or even know them or understand why societies need to follow good practice rules. People should have respect for eachother, but these days, that is disappearing, so societies a falling apart . Sad

    • @edmasterson4588
      @edmasterson4588 Před 5 lety

      i like the word you used "logic". it is very logical to show respect to people, if everyone did it there wouldn't be as many problems in society. however i also believe that illogical etiquette rules are worthless, even stifling to human growth and potential. so i agree with you because if something is sensible and logical it is probably of use individually or to the whole.

  • @julia9557
    @julia9557 Před 5 lety +4

    The host is over the top