The Scandalous Execution Of Queen Anne Boleyn | Lovers Who Changed History | Real Royalty

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  • čas přidán 19. 03. 2020
  • They are two of history’s most talked about figures, but how much do we really know about the ill-fated lovers? Dr Suzannah Lipscomb retraces the couples’ steps by visiting the places that were important to them, where their romantic, political and tragic lives were played out, and meet people today who are hell bent on finding out the truth about the Tudor love affair that changed everything forever.
    From Elizabeth II to Cleopatra, Real Royalty peels back the curtain to give a glimpse into the lives of some of the most influential families in the world, with new full length documentaries posted every week covering the monarchies of today and all throughout history.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @scarletdragon23
    @scarletdragon23 Před 4 lety +2496

    The biggest irony of this story is that Anne Boleyn actually gave Henry the heir he so desperately wanted. Elizabeth went on to become the greatest monarch in the history of England...

    • @aleksanderwaldon992
      @aleksanderwaldon992 Před 4 lety +65

      One of the most overrated.

    • @aleksanderwaldon992
      @aleksanderwaldon992 Před 4 lety +73

      Yes, overrated. She persecuted her subjects bloodily, and her and her daddy's governments led to the impoverishment of a country that achieved comparable development to that before the Reformation only in the 18th century. Presenting her rule as a period of great success is only Protestant propaganda. For example - it is a pity that many defenders of the country against the Spanish armada did not receive any remuneration for their service.

    • @jasperhorace7147
      @jasperhorace7147 Před 4 lety +27

      @misuzu9254 what rubbish. Katherine had an excellent childhood. She was 17 when Elizabeth was born. Hardly a child at all by then.

    • @risksikrikak903
      @risksikrikak903 Před 4 lety +4

      No shite.

    • @xin2yu976
      @xin2yu976 Před 4 lety +7

      yup exactly...

  • @iLe0492
    @iLe0492 Před 3 lety +1180

    Incredible to think that Anne was committing “adultery” when the King had several mistresses during his marriage to Katherine... still blaming women

    • @darianrose2195
      @darianrose2195 Před 3 lety +127

      I suppose adultery is only a sin if a woman commits it. Hypocrits.

    • @priveprive6255
      @priveprive6255 Před 3 lety +21

      I don't think Anne was cheating on you.
      But there is evidence that she was flirtatious through the history books and DNA Test can prove if she was so loyal.
      i don't believe in witchcraft or incest but she was a woman and some cheat. and henry wanted a son so much everything is possible henry may have cheated on anne too.

    • @adventuresincrt1376
      @adventuresincrt1376 Před 3 lety +27

      Maybe it was justice for subverting Queen Catherine of Aragon and she got her 'karma'.

    • @robertbaker4284
      @robertbaker4284 Před 3 lety +24

      The birth of Henry's bastard son, Henry Fitzroy, supplied credence for Henry's belief that his "queens" were responsible for denying him a male heir. Even Jane Seymour, who finally provided Henry with a male heir, paid with her life as she died little more than week after from complications related to childbirth. The "curse" continued after Henry's death as Edward, his legitimate successor, died before reaching adulthood. His designated successor, a cousin, Lady Jane Grey, was never crowned as Henry's declared bastard, Catherine's daughter, Mary, had Lady Jane imprisoned and executed before seizing the throne for herself. There remained many disaffected Catholics, as Mary was raised Catholic by her mother Catherine of Aragon, who supported Mary's claim to the throne and her efforts to destroy Henry's Church of England. Through those efforts she acquired her moniker of "Bloody Mary." She, too, failed to provide an heir and, as some would say, by default Elizabeth, who was raised Anglican, was crowned Queen as the popularly recognized sole surviving direct heir of Henry VIII. And the rest, as they say, is history.
      I believe that it was near the dawn of the 20th century before medical science discovered proof that the father actually determines the gender of his offspring That the mother merely nurtures the seed planted by the father, Something that Anne was unfortunately unable to do with her miscarried son. As the Spaniard so eloquently put it, "Anne miscarried her savior." How accurately those words proved to be true. Had she been able to carry that son to full term and he survived until adulthood, how differently would history have played out? Perhaps four less wives for Henry VIII and no eventual Queen Elizabeth I? Who's to say?
      As it is, the famous, colorful, and brief Tudor Dynasty, begun by Henry Vii, came to an end with the death of his granddaughter, Elizabeth, whose successor, James, was the son of the mother that Elizabeth, as Queen, had put to death. And so began the Stuarts. The sanguine history of English monarchs is so much a bloody soap opera.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 Před 3 lety +3

      @@darianrose2195 you all sound like a bunch of bitter whiny feminazis. Times were different back then. Get over it.

  • @padmamohankumar2668
    @padmamohankumar2668 Před 4 lety +549

    Such a tragic irony of history. She gave him a daughter who turned out to be the greatest monarch in history. But she lost her head.

  • @SV-yj6ef
    @SV-yj6ef Před 4 lety +699

    Back then it was believed that a woman alone determined the sex of the child, not the man, when all along it is the man who determines it. How ironic. I believe Anne was cunning in her pursuit of the queen’s crown, but I don’t believe she did the things she was accused, convicted and ultimately beheaded for. This Henry was a dreadful beast of a man.

    • @takohamoolsen2432
      @takohamoolsen2432 Před 4 lety +12

      Among the male aristocrats of today, that still stands. My late aunt used to work for a former Harley St OB/GYN who tried to explain the XX and XY chromosomes to such a person (no names) after having 3 girls and the...errr...'gentleman' concerned had this doctor taken off the medical listings for daring to tell the truth.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +31

      Sadly, Anne Boleyn was also used by her father like he used his other two children so that he can gain favor and Power in the English Court. Thomas Boylen should have been the one to have his head cut off, and not Ann & George.

    • @maryanker55anker37
      @maryanker55anker37 Před 4 lety +6

      @@montrelouisebohon-harris7023 ur probably right.az it was women were there not for their dare I say(looks).they were breeding machines.their opinions were also checked.i guess they had to b submissive n quiet like a mouse.unlike today women's rights has far exceeded itself with pen n power tools.the tapestry of domestic life strangely enough is a history lesson.lol

    • @jenniehudson5742
      @jenniehudson5742 Před 4 lety +8

      He was a terrible womaniser.he had awhile with Anne's sister Mary and other illegitimate kids.I think he had his eye on Jane Seymour and needed an excuse to get Ann out t the way.lady Rockford did a lot of stirring for Anne aswell

    • @cierakitty
      @cierakitty Před 4 lety +11

      I agree...however since Anne knew how Katherine had and was being treated, I cannot help but wonder why she did not feel a bit of fear to become involved with him and go against the church which back then was a major crime. After Henry's accident, surely she could tell his personality changed.

  • @ThatFlower12
    @ThatFlower12 Před 4 lety +671

    Why do people think he loved her, Henry couldn’t love anyone but himself. Cruel psychopath and a murderer too. I refuse to believe he was capable of love.

    • @elizabethowen8559
      @elizabethowen8559 Před 3 lety +33

      littlejay 💯 percent. A classic malignant narcissist.

    • @maryannetzel8559
      @maryannetzel8559 Před 3 lety +10

      HE REMINDS ME OF MM. HARRY BETTER BE ALERT N WATCHFUL FOR HIS LIFE.

    • @jameslovell8682
      @jameslovell8682 Před 3 lety +15

      I think you are probably right. This presenter for some reason is putting a peculiar spin on this story, when history disagrees with her. Regardless of this presenter, it is well established that Henry had his eye on Jane Seymour for some time,

    • @jameslovell8682
      @jameslovell8682 Před 3 lety +16

      @@maryannetzel8559 Sociopaths are the same throughout history.

    • @brontewcat
      @brontewcat Před 3 lety +15

      Maryann Etzel What has the Duchess of Sussex ever done to warrant such a ridiculous belief.

  • @carollangley2984
    @carollangley2984 Před 4 lety +1700

    It is actually the male who determines the sex of a child a woman is carrying

    • @envyallison926
      @envyallison926 Před 4 lety +30

      Carol Langley nobody can determine the sex of a child.

    • @Kai-mx3tw
      @Kai-mx3tw Před 4 lety +221

      @@envyallison926 please tell me your joking

    • @raffaellavitiello1762
      @raffaellavitiello1762 Před 4 lety +131

      Yes the man determine the sex never the woman

    • @jeanettewaverly2590
      @jeanettewaverly2590 Před 4 lety +245

      Right. The male gamete can carry either a Y (male) or an X (female) chromosome. The female gamete can carry only an X chromosome. Too bad that wasn’t known back in the 16th century!

    • @brontewcat
      @brontewcat Před 4 lety +124

      Envy Allison The sperm carries the information that determines the sex of the child. That is what Carol Langley meant.

  • @sandraobrien8705
    @sandraobrien8705 Před 3 lety +131

    Poor Catherine of Aragon. If he chose to cast her off, he could still have treated her with kindness and left her dignity as intact as possible. It just seems cruel to have prevented her seeing her daughter and denying her a state funeral. She had been Queen of England and was a royal princess by birth. She deserved better.

    • @Bloombaby99
      @Bloombaby99 Před 2 lety +4

      Agreed 1000%.

    • @thefirstiagree1091
      @thefirstiagree1091 Před 2 lety +4

      I agree with you 1 million percent

    • @freyamckenzie5583
      @freyamckenzie5583 Před rokem +2

      This may have exacerbated all the murderous hatred in Catherine's daughter, Mary l who killed as many Protestants as possible, The Protestant Anne Boleyn was, whom Henry left her mother for.

    • @terintiaflavius3349
      @terintiaflavius3349 Před rokem +4

      @@freyamckenzie5583 That hatred was made by Henry's treatment of her mother and herself.

    • @MadgeGreen
      @MadgeGreen Před rokem +3

      Yes, if Henry had only treated Catherine and Mary better then perhaps Queen Mary wouldn't have had so many people burned at the stake. Her father had also refused to allow her to marry and so she missed out on motherhood which she desperately

  • @watch2muchtv
    @watch2muchtv Před 4 lety +380

    Anne didn’t give Henry a male heir. Then she started having miscarriages. Henry had her excited. I feel badly for Henry’s first wife. She was loyal. And betrayed by a man she loved.

    • @gabriellecrofts6664
      @gabriellecrofts6664 Před 3 lety +12

      executed not excited

    • @anastasiab9506
      @anastasiab9506 Před 3 lety +3

      ​@wings of a butterfly Were you there? You are the one that never learned to shut your mouth, better start now, your stupidity is showing

    • @dianekeane7740
      @dianekeane7740 Před 3 lety +7

      It bears repeating that sex is determined by sperm, which is the male contribution to conception. All eggs are X chromosome. Anne gave birth to a healthy baby girl who went on to rule England for 40 years. A woman can't inherently choose the sex of her child. Had Anne been able to "give" Henry a son, she would have, thus securing her title. Considering the quality of prenatal & postnatal care, not to mention the often brutal medical reality of labor and childbirth in olden times, it's remarkable that women and children survived and flourished as well as they did. As it was, infant mortality was very high and many women died from complications giving birth. One can only imagine the stress both Catherine and Anne were under to "produce a male heir; there was only so much they had control over.

    • @N0N4M30
      @N0N4M30 Před 3 lety +2

      @Age Of Plankton y’all are getting it wrong HENRY DIDNT PRODUCE A MALE HEIR and his own incompetence made him execute women such a narcissistic fuckboy

    • @yagmurtuna837
      @yagmurtuna837 Před 3 lety

      @Age Of Plankton Plus, Ma Donna was already a monarch and, badass enough to make the Vatican declare a whole country non religionous because Henry tried to divorce her.

  • @ar1079
    @ar1079 Před 4 lety +192

    A low self esteem man is capable of hurting everyone close to him.

    • @fraydizs7302
      @fraydizs7302 Před 2 lety +3

      Same could be said for anyone really

  • @Mikkaela77
    @Mikkaela77 Před 4 lety +879

    Henry executed Anne Boleyn so he can marry Jane Seymour...simple as that

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 3 lety +72

      Yes! According to the ambassador to Charles V he said that Jane Seymour was not pretty and that she was nowhere near as intelligent as Catherine of Aragon or Anne Boleyn. He didn't think she was a virgin at all and she was pretty boring. Henry just saw Jane as a baby maker and that was it regardless of him saying he loved her more than anybody else. If he loved her so much he would have told the doctor to choose her life over that of the baby because he didn't know she was going to have a boy.
      Luckily Jane did have a boy and lived through the C-section but died from a fever 12 Days Later. I think Henry felt guilty and after being married for a year and 5 months he hadn't had time to get sick of her yet but he had threatened her a couple times because she wanted Catholic Abbey's restored.
      I'm pretty sure after he threatened her twice and told her to remember an and to stay out of his business & business affairs, Jane was likely certain that Henry, along with most people at court, had everything to do with Anne boleyn's execution.

    • @tietearoddy
      @tietearoddy Před 3 lety +4

      Yup

    • @priveprive6255
      @priveprive6255 Před 3 lety +16

      He wanted a son .

    • @joebloggs619
      @joebloggs619 Před 3 lety +24

      I think he wasn't all that interested in women, despite having had so many sexual dalliances and wives, though he seems to have genuinely loved some eg the attractive flirty Anne Boleyn who was his social match ie good looking like he was in youth, fond of social gaiety etc. And, initially, he seemed like a man who tried to be a good loyal husband and father. But what he really desperately wanted was a son and when no son materialised from all these women he had, he just turned into a very ugly, nasty pissed off male. I'd say all his prolific male sexual activity was motivated by just one obseesive thought. Produce a son, by any means possible, with any woman willing to try, love and attraction only being of secondary importance ie she only had to be attractive enough to make sex possible so as to produce this illusory son he so desperately craved. That was his real sexual objective, not having all the women he had, who were foolish enough to believe life would be great as the king's latest mistress, concubine, official wife etc. They were all sucked in by his masculine charm and looks and his power and status. It never occurred to any of them that such power etc could turn very lethal and ugly if they didn't deliver what, as powerful male, he expected. Babies. Which the wives knew they had to produce for him and were agreeable to trying to do. But not just any babies. He wanted sons. Daughters would never be good enough for him. Though Queen Elizabeth 1 proved him wrong, as the powerful smart, ruthless monarch she became, whilst still retaining her feminine image, despite being underestimated, kicked around, even doing a stint in jail and managing to be released just before her execution was scheduled. I think that would take a fair bit of female grit and courage, determination etc to survive and then carry on running the Empire, as she did, having to keep all her courtiers in line, as some were only obviously hanging around her, waiting for the opportunity for her to fall, so they could grab the crown for themselves. But, in a symbolic gesture, she refused to fall, even when very ill and close to death. She just stood upright, to the very end. To make her point about who's queen as long as she still is alive and who's in charge around here. Her, not the ones trying to snatch her crown off her. I don't know how she could have been such a strong woman, though she looked so thin, pale, frail and ultra feminine. She was a very learned, intelligent woman and had the good sense to not marry and breed because she obviously knew what was in store if a woman tried to be a greatcareerwoman ie run the country, which she had to do and try to be a wife and breeder as well. Too much "home/work" conflict and imbalance to do either well and she was a perfectionist, just looking at her appearance and her great intellectual skills, largely self taught, in the long periods she had to spend completely alone. And then there was her half sister, Mary Queen of Scots. Sometimes "sisters" can be a problem and, much as one may love one's kin and gender, they need to be appropriately dealt with. If a queen is to rule, a gal must do what a gal must do. Eliminate the obstacles to her getting the job done as it needs to be done. Set aside personal feelings and emotional ties etc and deal with the problems that too much closeneness can cause for people in positions of power and authority eg you could be betrayed by the very ones you cared about too much and tried to benefit. There is a need to be utterly ruthless, sometimes, simply to retain power and control. There is no other way, human nature being what it is. I would not like to be in a situation, like her, being forced to make such painful decisions, though...

    • @lalafuentes7392
      @lalafuentes7392 Před 3 lety +21

      Annemarie May Mary Queen of Scots was her cousin not her sister. She has a sister name Mary. But the queen of Scots was her cousin

  • @meera6491
    @meera6491 Před 3 lety +387

    Who is the actor that plays Anne Boleyn?. She perfectly embodies the character.

    • @IAmNotNicolex
      @IAmNotNicolex Před 3 lety +46

      Looks like Emma Connell is the actress. Had to look it up as I also enjoyed her portrayal. And Jack Hawkins is Henry, if you wanted that info. It popped up next to hers.

    • @meera6491
      @meera6491 Před 3 lety +12

      @@IAmNotNicolex Thankyou so much.

    • @user-uo3tm1dv5i
      @user-uo3tm1dv5i Před 3 lety +9

      she is too pretty for this role i think

    • @femke6313
      @femke6313 Před 3 lety +19

      @@user-uo3tm1dv5i her lips are too full, but for the other part she resembles are a lot in the painting she is holding a rose. It is said to be the most accurate and hangs in her house Hever castle

    • @femke6313
      @femke6313 Před 3 lety +21

      @@IAmNotNicolex if the real Henry looked like the actor did (before he got morbidly obese) i understand that so many people fell had a crush on him.

  • @saravine3473
    @saravine3473 Před 4 lety +372

    He only blames her. He forgot that they made that baby girl together.

    • @patbutler1141
      @patbutler1141 Před 4 lety +2

      Soeasytoo. Forget

    • @patreonsage5169
      @patreonsage5169 Před 4 lety +32

      Men thought women determined sex of a child. Simple, but wrong.

    • @SV-yj6ef
      @SV-yj6ef Před 4 lety +30

      Back then it was believed that a woman alone determined the sex of the child, not the man, when all along it is the man who determines it. How ironic.

    • @Just999Me
      @Just999Me Před 4 lety +19

      @@SV-yj6ef crazy ironic. and the fact that he probably wasted some sperm that could've been male on all his sex escapades with numerous other women that were not his wife.

    • @Cami-dc9iu
      @Cami-dc9iu Před 3 lety +3

      @@SV-yj6ef god it angers me

  • @dstrong5897
    @dstrong5897 Před 3 lety +35

    Ladies beware! The way he treats his "exes" is the way he treats with you.

  • @christinaorriz7971
    @christinaorriz7971 Před 3 lety +813

    She gave birth to a girl. The greatest monarch England has ever had.

    • @AshLoRo
      @AshLoRo Před 3 lety +94

      And he murdered the Woman who bore her, He murdered The true Queen Mother. The pardox of it all, it actually hurts. I have so much sympathy for Ann, but truthfully.... I feel such sorrow for everyone of his wives. All they got was death, exile, pain, humiliation, sorrow, constant anxiety, no freedom, courtiers constantly plotting & lieing. His wives, bore the true torment of King Henry, the mad King.

    • @Moonewitch
      @Moonewitch Před 3 lety +8

      @@AshLoRo I wholly agree!

    • @bethanyrachel63
      @bethanyrachel63 Před 3 lety +4

      Much agreed 🤝 🇬🇧

    • @bethanyrachel63
      @bethanyrachel63 Před 3 lety +16

      @@AshLoRo absolutely agree... There are many women I feel sorry for Mary Queen of Scots... Not bloody Mary she is different to Elizabeth's cousin... Each one of Henry's wives and even the mistresses themselves such deciet and pain beyond what we can imagine both ways and such the ones he divorced and the one who survived would have seen the pain he caused to each of the wives... Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded and survived. Ann was the first wife he essentially killed which I think I so so sad his first divorce was the only the beginning of something so sad... Such unfairness.

    • @nazmabegum2780
      @nazmabegum2780 Před 3 lety +3

      @@AshLoRo
      The public said that she used witchcraft to make Henry love him. Only if they knew 😭✌🏻

  • @CA-bw9vw
    @CA-bw9vw Před 3 lety +502

    So lemme get this straight
    1. Henry and everybody else thought it was the woman's fault that the children are born female
    2. When Anne does get a boy, and loses it due to the stress of Henry's grievous life-threatening accident, it's still her fault for miscarrying because it must be she doesn't have the backing of god.
    Ok ok so the point really is: society hates women

    • @lyissdustyy._.lavender6399
      @lyissdustyy._.lavender6399 Před 3 lety +6

      @Olivia Fox well, your not wrong but you are right at the same time Anne Boyeln, gave 20 years of her life to Henry yet though she gave birth to a popular, Monarch to ever live Queen Elizabeth, Elizabeth never grew up with Anne because she died. & Mary, Elizabeth's older sister was supposed to be a Queen if her youngest brother died.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 Před 3 lety +7

      No society does not hate women. This was 500 yrs ago. Stop whining and playing the "poor woman" victim card.

    • @liageorge9411
      @liageorge9411 Před 3 lety +32

      ​@@trawlins396 doesn't change the fact that 500 years ago, women were invalidated purely on the basis of their sex and seen as inferior - I count my lucky stars I was born in an era where my worth wasn't determined by what gender I was born as, and I'm grateful to these strong, resilient women in history who paved the way for me through their grace a little rebellions

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 Před 3 lety +5

      @@liageorge9411 exactly.you said it. FIVE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. It's time to turn the page already. Society in 2020 does not "hate" women. That's laughable.

    • @trawlins396
      @trawlins396 Před 3 lety +3

      @@liageorge9411 and there were a LOT of women back then who had powerful roles.

  • @nonmihiseddeo4181
    @nonmihiseddeo4181 Před 4 lety +98

    Katherine of Aragon's story was indeed tragic in the way it began and ended. Her exalted life in Spain growing up was in stark contrast to her life in England, where she came to know want, privation, and great uncertainty. Neither her royal bloodline nor her ability as a capable leader in Henry's absence helped her in the least when the chips were down. So sad.

    • @leanie9660
      @leanie9660 Před 3 lety +4

      Her devout Catholicism did not help her either. I wonder how people can actually still believe that nonsense about some sky-guy

    • @actionjackson3522
      @actionjackson3522 Před 3 lety +7

      Antonia Fraser's book on the wives of Henry VIII drives it home even worse: Katherine had been raised to believe that she could be a queen co-ruler like her mother, Isabella. She spent 8 years stuck in England as a pawn between Henry VII and her father Ferdinand. And then, after 20 years of marriage, she was repudiated for something that biologically, wasn't her fault.

  • @ugh_itsthebellas9030
    @ugh_itsthebellas9030 Před 3 lety +70

    Although Anne was hateful and cruel to some people. I have always admired her intelligence. She was the only woman who could get the king to divorce Catherine AND destroy the Catholic name. She was young and brave and she realised she was going to fast and tripped. Her greatest revenge to Henry was Elizabeth. One of the most famous queens in England.

    • @freyamckenzie5583
      @freyamckenzie5583 Před rokem

      If Anne Boleyn was born in 1501, she would have been born during the year of The Rooster, as is Kate and Meghan however sometimes it's stated she was born in 1507 (The Rabbit.... haha, had she lived, she might have had many more children).

  • @jameslovell8682
    @jameslovell8682 Před 3 lety +38

    It is absolutely absurd of the presenter to suggest that Henry had no interest in Jane Seymour when he married her eleven days after Anne's execution.

    • @_mylo_xyloto_1816
      @_mylo_xyloto_1816 Před 3 lety

      Shea just saying what dirwctoe wants her to sya

    • @user-uo3tm1dv5i
      @user-uo3tm1dv5i Před 3 lety +1

      he was already not in the good health so he was worried time is running out.....

  • @pyromania1018
    @pyromania1018 Před 4 lety +588

    Short, simple answer: he got bored with her.

    • @cadencehorchner7039
      @cadencehorchner7039 Před 4 lety +13

      Jackson Rushing Not really what happened...

    • @pyromania1018
      @pyromania1018 Před 4 lety +61

      @@cadencehorchner7039 Nah, it kind of is. He thought she could give him a son, and when she couldn't, he tossed her aside. Once they slept together, his passion for her slowly died. I am aware of Henry's ruling style, though--appointing people who had nothing to high positions so they could do all the ruling while he goofed off, and then disposing of them once they got too uppity. Anne was one such person (okay, she didn't come from nothing, but she still didn't have any powerful friends to protect her from him), which, in addition to her failure to bear him a son, made it easier for him to decide to get rid of her.

    • @cadencehorchner7039
      @cadencehorchner7039 Před 4 lety +17

      @@pyromania1018 Alright, I completely understand now. Thank you for being so respectful I apologize if I came across as rude.

    • @pyromania1018
      @pyromania1018 Před 4 lety +11

      @@cadencehorchner7039 You didn't. In hindsight, I probably should have elaborated, but I personally think the reason wasn't all that complex... unless what I just said counts as complex.

    • @cadencehorchner7039
      @cadencehorchner7039 Před 4 lety +4

      @@pyromania1018 nah, you're ok. I'm just not the smartest person in the world 😂

  • @brianeduardo1234
    @brianeduardo1234 Před 4 lety +262

    Katherine of Aragon one of the most wronged people in history.... wonder what the current Katherine may think?

    • @doxasophosmoros
      @doxasophosmoros Před 4 lety +3

      What current Katherine? There is none. You stupid cow ... lol names means fuck all. You're slow as

    • @cplmpcocptcl6306
      @cplmpcocptcl6306 Před 4 lety +60

      kaboom That’s just rude.

    • @brianeduardo1234
      @brianeduardo1234 Před 4 lety +20

      @@cplmpcocptcl6306 thank you

    • @XyzXyz-mm9vq
      @XyzXyz-mm9vq Před 4 lety +3

      @Brian Eduardo / Would you please elaborate on who the “current Katherine” is? Thank you 😊

    • @roblove8354
      @roblove8354 Před 4 lety +3

      Brian Eduardo You are just another clown trying to get attention by making a foolish comment. Feel that I am wasting my time even commenting on your drivel Rob

  • @zoedark7101
    @zoedark7101 Před 4 lety +412

    If he loved her he wouldn't have had her executed.

    • @cristinamrp948
      @cristinamrp948 Před 4 lety +72

      Love? There's love and lust. He lusted her but he was not empathic to love anyone but himself. Maybe they were both the victims of plots but personally I think he was a cold hearted psychopath. Poor Anne, God have Mercy.

    • @debrap947
      @debrap947 Před 4 lety +50

      He loved himself much more than any other human being.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +17

      Henry cared for more for himself and his reputation and ego than he ever cared for anyone else.. he was vain and SELFISH. Henry like to novelty and if he didn't get what he wanted from one person he would go to someone else. He did the same thing with in his Council as he did with his wives. When Cardinal Wolsey was not able to get him divorce or annulment, he stripped the Cardinal of all his money and property, and sent him away after he had served the king for 20 years or more. I think the Cardinal committed suicide and Henry didn't kill him because he was a Catholic priest. It was taboo to do that even though he was killing other Catholics in the street by the thousands and calling them traitors once he separated from the church of England. Henry did away with Cardinal Wolsey before he started the Church of England and that's probably the only thing that saved him from the scaffold. It was Henry's fault that the Cardinals could not get him an annulment because the Vatican had copies of the letters Henry had written to Ann. Henry could never accept the fact that he did anything wrong because in his eyes he was perfect because he was King and anointed by God. Anne Boleyn was the one that gave him a book that made his head grow even bigger and inevitably led to her being cast aside and beheaded. She gave him this book that someone had written about monarchs being the Supreme head of their land which included politics and religion. That's where Henry got the great idea to separate from the Catholic church and began his own church in England, and that inevitably led to Ann's downfall. Sad!
      Charles Brandon was the only one close to the king who survived! He and the King has grown up together and been best friends because their fathers were close friends. Henry was jovial and considered a virtuous King for about 20 years. He was also injured during a joust when he was married to Catherine of Aragon and he hit his head and was unconscious for a couple days then. That was right before he got obsessed with Ann. He knew an but he didn't become obsessed with her until probably 5 years or so after knowing her. Ann wasn't interested in him at all, and it took her a long time to have feelings for him. Even then she wasn't about to give herself up and be his mistress. contrary to what most people thought at the time, Ann Boelyn was not a seductress.
      Henry was getting infatuated with Jane Seymour after Ann had a miscarriage in about 4 months and lost their son. No surprise there because he considered her just like he had Cardinal Wolsey and she couldn't deliver what she promised...

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +4

      @@cristinamrp948 the only person that escaped his wrath was Charles Brandon and Charles even married the king sister in secret and still survived. Why? Charles married Mary around 1518 before Henry went completely nuts. Princess Mary had been Queen consort in France but her husband died a couple of months after their marriage. Charles Brandon went to retrieve her from France and bring her back to England and they snuck off and got married.😂😂😂 Charles knew Henry would be furious with him despite the fact he was Henry's best friend and his team-mate in sports in addition to fighting so many wars with Henry. Charles live because Charles new Henry like the back of his hand and was able to adapt to the king's changes in temperament and mental status over time which was something that most people couldn't do. Henry forgave Charles after he finally came back to court as a humble servant on the council and beg to the king for his forgiveness, etc.. Charles knew he had wounded the Kings vanity and had Charles done that 15 years later, I don't know if he would have lived...doubtful. Charles and Henry matured and Charles was also always the king's confidant. Henry knew that Charles Brandon had good morals and that he was a good man. Henry knew Charles was loyal to him and would do whatever the king asked of him, ;& also knew that Charles would never take unfair advantage of anyone; not even a foe

    • @doxasophosmoros
      @doxasophosmoros Před 4 lety +1

      Not many.died at all, actually! He also had a reign which saved more than the previous Catholic ones.. the world you live in now actually started cause of protestant rule.. only about 3 of the wives died .. only two were executed cause of treason. So yeah, learn your real history !

  • @Peachypink-mi4md
    @Peachypink-mi4md Před 4 lety +112

    When she knelt on Katherin's grave.. my heart ached... what a poor woman she was 💔💔💔

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +8

      Yess! I felt so bad for her and none of it was her fault but she just wasn't a baby maker and some women aren"t. Catherine could have had something like polycystic ovarian disease because that causes repeated miscarriages and back then they didn't know what it was. And besides Henry was off fighting Wars for the first 15 years of their marriage and wasn't focused on having errors until he was getting closer to 40. Katherine was 5 years older than him and by the time he woke up and realized he'd wasted his younger years fighting Wars he was 38 years old and Catherine was 43 and too old to have babies. Just because she may have still been menstrating didn't mean that she was fertile. By then she would have been going through perimenopause most likely.
      I admire Catherine of Aragon because she always remained humble. Despite being angry and heartbroken she wasn't filled with hatred like her daughter, Mary Tudor. Mary was a spoiled brat and it ripped her to shreds when her father called her a bastard!! She was about 15 years old when her dad stripped her princess title from her and yeah it was a big deal but not enough to cause one to be so bitter for life. I think her bitterness was what resulted in her getting cancer later on, in addition to the fact that she didn't have children when she was younger. Henry could have married her but it was hard to get anyone to marry her because she really wasn't a princess anymore. Mary Tudor was stripped in between rolls between 1432 & 1545. Henry restored Mary and Elizabeth right to succession but by then Mary was already 37/38. No one would have married her during the years despite she was a daughter of King Henry because she was labeled a bastard all of those years. Rather than blaming Ann, she should have blamed her father for being so selfish. Elizabeth was almost 3 when she lost her princess title in too young to understand but she didn't care much about being Queen of England. Mary hungered for it and that's why she later became known as Bloody Mary. If Henry were in his right mind, he never would have put Mary Tudor in the line of succession because she was a Catholic and would have caused an uproar in the country aftee he had already established the Church of England... I don't think that it ever occurred to Henry that Edward would have died young and that was foolish for him to think such a thing because it was common for men to Die Young then. Henry's own brother died young so he should have known better!

    • @actionjackson3522
      @actionjackson3522 Před 3 lety +6

      @@montrelouisebohon-harris7023 It's been suggested that Catherine died of cancer that had spread to her heart; Mary, her daughter, almost certainly had it. In my opinion, the whole tale of Henry's life and the impact on his children is a tragedy of the psychology of the time. His sole surviving son was left to die of tuberculosis while the Royal coffers were plundered; Mary was desperate to marry and produce an heir; and Elizabeth refused to marry after seeing her stepmothers, half-sister and the wife of the man she loved all be cast aside by their husbands.

    • @vpspad880
      @vpspad880 Před 3 lety

      She had Catherine of Aragon housed in very poor conditions, which caused her demise.

  • @paulmichalis
    @paulmichalis Před 3 lety +16

    Henry viii was described by Charles Dickens as a spot off blood and grease on the pages of British history,I think that’s pretty accurate.

  • @kaywalsh794
    @kaywalsh794 Před 4 lety +61

    Why is there no mention of Thomas Cromwell, King Henry's chief minister and right-hand man, who was one of the biggest players in this whole drama? Almost every historian agrees that Cromwell was responsible for plotting Anne's downfall. In a nutshell, Anne and Cromwell had a falling out and Cromwell was well aware that Anne had more influence over King Henry than he had. Not to mention that almost all the men implicated were political opponents of Cromwell.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +10

      Cromwell was a traitor & a secret Lutheran. Had the king known he would have had Cromwell burned. Years later when it was discovered that he was a traitor and had been taking money and gold from the Abbeys and thereby basically stealing from the King, the council had him convicted and he was hacked in the process of being beheaded. That executioner chopped him in the back several times before he was actually beheaded.

    • @kellsjoy3078
      @kellsjoy3078 Před 3 lety +3

      As well, Archbishop Cranmer. No mention.

    • @sherrydrake9578
      @sherrydrake9578 Před 3 lety +4

      Cromwell was threatened by Anne because she would have the King kill her enemies. Cromwell had to have her killed before she could have him killed.

    • @omarjames11
      @omarjames11 Před 3 lety +1

      I think it was the spanish ambassador who started the rumor about Ann.....

  • @IBeMelissa
    @IBeMelissa Před 3 lety +163

    It's actually strange that the woman who gave Henry over 20 years of love birthed a girl who would be labeled 'Bloody Mary' and the daughter who Anne Boleyn birthed within 3 years would be one of the greatest Queens in British history.

    • @meleesacolter6109
      @meleesacolter6109 Před 3 lety +21

      She probably only heard bitterness from her mother and was out for revenge rather than thinking with a clearer head

    • @MsJubjubbird
      @MsJubjubbird Před 3 lety +13

      I'm not surprised Mary was that way. She would have had serious mental health issues after what she'd been through. I's probably why she became so attached to her husband and he left her.

    • @amynix2632
      @amynix2632 Před 3 lety +23

      The Princess Mary was isolated at a very early age and grew up not knowing her father and separated from her mother. She was constantly changing status from heir to illegitimate back to heir...favored and beloved to ignored, isolated, and exiled. Then back to court darling. The emotional whiplash must have been severe. She was deprived of every natural relationship to her family. Because of her time and place, she attributed religious significance to all of these sufferings, and it should not surprise anyone that she was unstable in the ways that she was. She, herself, was anxious to the point of psychological disorder over producing an heir. Again...none of it passed without Mary attaching religious weight to everything.

    • @thelittleredhairedgirlfrom6527
      @thelittleredhairedgirlfrom6527 Před 3 lety +5

      @@amynix2632 Mary did have a relationship with her mother early on as Catherine personally tutored Mary in Latin and Spanish, but when Mary was granted her own household that likely lessened the contact between mother and daughter. Then when Henry married Anne he forbid them from communicating with each other, though Mary and Catherine still communicated secretly

    • @sleepyowl8815
      @sleepyowl8815 Před rokem

      That’s cause Mary had hundreds of Protestant Christians executed because they weren’t catholic

  • @cierakitty
    @cierakitty Před 4 lety +91

    I believe he grew tired of her...no heir, people did not like her... religious problems because he was with her...and he did have a roving eye at court eyeing other women. Anne knew she was losing favor in his eyes already. He had already eyed another to take her place, in fact minutes after Anne was beheaded, Henry and his men rode off to another woman he was interested in. One way or another, Anne had to go. Sad story in a way....yet most of history seems to be.

    • @frenchkiss8789
      @frenchkiss8789 Před 3 lety +5

      Yes he rode off to see Jane Seymour

    • @msi8311
      @msi8311 Před 2 lety +3

      At least his children were able to live. Unlike the Romanovs, for example.

  • @gastii6613
    @gastii6613 Před 4 lety +128

    So I learned that Anne Boleyn's charges roasted Henry so hard he had to execute her.

    • @readingrainbowbutterfliesi9872
      @readingrainbowbutterfliesi9872 Před 4 lety +39

      "I wouldn't be such a bitch, if you could get it up."

    • @sophiarieke118
      @sophiarieke118 Před 3 lety +2

      @@readingrainbowbutterfliesi9872 uh oh! here we go is that what you said?

    • @idkmansoundskindagay2709
      @idkmansoundskindagay2709 Před 3 lety +2

      @@sophiarieke118 and now he's going off with "off with her head!" 𝓝𝓸!

    • @marys.8379
      @marys.8379 Před 2 lety

      @@idkmansoundskindagay2709 yeah I'm pretty sure he means it!

  • @DetroitLives313
    @DetroitLives313 Před 4 lety +79

    Three days from conviction to execution? Wow, they didn't mess around back then, did they? Today a person could sit on death row in America for 10-15 years and sometimes longer.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +6

      Nope & even the king himself would threaten people on the jury and make sure that what he wanted was the verdict rendered! They didn't dare go against what he wanted or they risk being killed.

    • @DetroitLives313
      @DetroitLives313 Před 4 lety +3

      @Montre' Louise Bohon-Harris Thank you! So I guess once a person had been charged with treason and especially by the King, a trial was just a formality.

    • @angelabell8725
      @angelabell8725 Před 3 lety +3

      Strange I wondered why nobody help her escape.Couldn't she have gone to Spain for protection or anywhere Germany.Strange nobody attempt to arrange her rescue.

    • @randomlydi3602
      @randomlydi3602 Před 3 lety +2

      @@angelabell8725 if they were going to help anyone escaping to Germany or Spain, it would be Catherine of Aragon and Mary. After all, they were aunt and cousin of the Holy Emperor and King of Spain...

    • @cha2117
      @cha2117 Před 3 lety +1

      That's what people don't understand now the sovereignty is the authority and that's why Brexit is so important.

  • @awesomeshorts8664
    @awesomeshorts8664 Před 3 lety +37

    The fact that Elizabeth reigned for 45 years and was the most powerful queen in history and king Edward died 6 years after his reign, well, that speaks volumes! Along with many other things such as king Henry marrying straight after her death!

  • @fancysfolly554
    @fancysfolly554 Před 4 lety +84

    This girl has beautiful hair

  • @sandranorman5469
    @sandranorman5469 Před 4 lety +118

    Henry was a monster.

  • @makenzeekaye
    @makenzeekaye Před 4 lety +117

    I love these movies. this is so interesting, it’s insane how even women of high power were just treated like chattle.. he was very sexist. And a murderer but all the kings then were, weren’t they?

    • @robertbaker4284
      @robertbaker4284 Před 3 lety +4

      Insane? Consider the times. The Bible's teachings and consequently the Church considered women as the servant of man and the reason for their creation. In royal circles the arranged marriages of women were bargaining chips to forge alliances and prevent wars between kingdoms and nations. Henry VIII's attitude toward women was widely shared all over Europe. In that he was hardly unique. Of Henry's six wives, only two were executed. Two were divorced or annulled, one died, and one survived him. There was no outcry, for he was the King of all his subjects. His third wife, Jane Seymour, provided Henry with his coveted male heir which his first two wives failed to deliver. Unfortunately she died shortly after from complications from childbirth. Had she lived, perhaps there would've been no more wives for Henry and history would've played out differently. Who's to say otherwise?

    • @kellydixon60
      @kellydixon60 Před 2 lety

      Henry's Granny Margaret Beaufort, his mother Princess Elizabeth of York were formidable as was Anne and her daughter Elizabeth I.

  • @hitmaniaatlantic7314
    @hitmaniaatlantic7314 Před 2 lety +8

    The relationship of Henry and Anne was always about power. Henry wanted the male son and Anne wanted power by marrying the king and supposedly producing a son. To marry someone who can ultimately cause your death sentence is unwise. Anne's so called infidelity was hatched by Henry's advisors.

  • @staciasmith5162
    @staciasmith5162 Před 3 lety +6

    They said that leg of his was so incredibly foul, it became very difficult to be in the same room with the king. I suppose that it's fitting that he who killed and tortured and caused suffering to so many suffered mightily himself.

  • @hollycourtney221
    @hollycourtney221 Před 3 lety +11

    Physically speaking, I picture Henry and especially Anne looking just like this. Best interpretation I've seen so far! One of my favorite hosts and historians too, not to mention! ☺

  • @rolandrothwell4840
    @rolandrothwell4840 Před 3 lety +20

    Anne had a panchayat for cruelty too. She danced at the death of Catherine of Aragon and councilled the King to execute the Lady Mary.

    • @percyweasley9301
      @percyweasley9301 Před 3 lety +3

      Rumors..

    • @ABC-ho5jo
      @ABC-ho5jo Před 2 lety

      @@percyweasley9301 truth because many sources say the same

    • @shooterdownunder
      @shooterdownunder Před 2 lety +2

      @@ABC-ho5jo actually many historians have debunked those rumours

  • @jonalviar8984
    @jonalviar8984 Před 4 lety +96

    After the death of Jane Seymour. No one want to marry the King since everyone knows that He neglected Katherine, executed Anne and let Jane died after a precious son was born. Duchess of Milan, a Danish princess (niece of Katherine) rejected the offer. Instead a German Anne of Cleeves was to marry the dismayed King after he paid handsomely for a dowry. Thanks to Hans Holbein's depiction of Anne. Lolz

    • @doxasophosmoros
      @doxasophosmoros Před 4 lety +3

      If not for that, Elizabeth the queen first never would have existed, so leave her dad alone.. his rule created her reign and protestant rule aka lead to the modern/ western revolution, so grow up!

    • @takohamoolsen2432
      @takohamoolsen2432 Před 4 lety +19

      And Anne of Cleves wasn't disappointed when she saw Henry?!
      He too was portrayed by Holbein as handsome and flawless, but in fact, he was not. Put yourself in her shoes, when she saw a fat-arse waddling towards her, with a red face and diseased leg!
      She was lucky to have Mary, Elizabeth and Edward love and respect her and to be declared "The King's Sister" after her divorce from Henry. She kept her head, money and dignity.

    • @nathalie1091
      @nathalie1091 Před 4 lety +1

      kaboom copy and paste is that all you do ? Come up with a better argument

    • @elibell19
      @elibell19 Před 3 lety +5

      @@takohamoolsen2432 Not to mention that Anne of Cleves was a member of a Protestant royal family. Henry needed Protestant allies in the continent, so he wasn't about to mistreat Anne without a really good excuse -which he hadn't.

  • @joannemadden7449
    @joannemadden7449 Před 4 lety +17

    If Henry could do what he did to those poor Holy Men, who just a few short years ago he believed in, it should have been a great big heads up to EVERYONE he ever came in contact with thereafter. Sadly, if he set his sights on you as a love interest, you couldn't deny him or at least without issue. My Family came to England during the Potato Famine, but prior to that Henry the 8th had his henchmen fight My Family and take their land and Castles because they were becoming to powerful. Our Family name was also altered. Many from Ireland suffered the same fate, as I'm sure other countries. My Father never once called us English.. lol, as My Granny use to say, " Just because a cat has her kittens in a barn, doesn't make them a horses" God bless Everyone

  • @juanitarichards1074
    @juanitarichards1074 Před 4 lety +43

    I have a very good book about Henry's childhood which shows that he had character flaws all along. His father didn't trust him and never groomed him for kingship, despite he being the only spare heir. And knowing the mortality rate in those days there was no guarantee that the young frail Arthur would ever become king. But their father just didn't like Henry and possibly with good reason. When he became king the first thing Henry did was to have his fathers former ministers Empson and Dudley executed, as a move to gain popularity with the people, who hared Empson and Dudley, who had just been carrying out the kings orders re taxation. He wasn't quite the affable young king he appeared to be.......

    • @poppygirl...
      @poppygirl... Před 4 lety +3

      👍👍

    • @juanitarichards1074
      @juanitarichards1074 Před 4 lety +5

      @kshiftkometh He never had syphilis. That is a myth. He would have had huge gaping ulcers on his face and the smell would be so bad you could smell it from the next room. He was also never treated with mercury, the only available treatment then.

    • @juanitarichards1074
      @juanitarichards1074 Před 4 lety +4

      @kshiftkometh Modern doctors have examined his meticulously kept medical records and he was never treated with mercury, which in itself stunk to hell. They believe he was diabetic and had osteomyelitis in his ulcerated leg - that is an infection of the bone.

    • @Daniela-pz9ze
      @Daniela-pz9ze Před 3 lety

      What book is that?

    • @juanitarichards1074
      @juanitarichards1074 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Daniela-pz9ze "The Making of Henry Vlll" by Louise Bruce.

  • @TheFunnygym
    @TheFunnygym Před 3 lety +18

    This seems like a little dose of karma to me. Anne and Henry treated Catherine like trash. What goes around comes around. I am definitely not excusing Annes execution, but I feel so bad for Catherine.

    • @vpspad880
      @vpspad880 Před 3 lety

      Anne and her family wanted power, even if Anne was an adulterer.

  • @Ladyjojo695
    @Ladyjojo695 Před 3 lety +26

    This is what power hungry men do at the peril of anyone who stands against them.
    History repeats in the current day.
    Wonderful video. Thank you 😊

  • @dianekeane7740
    @dianekeane7740 Před 4 lety +79

    Henry was King. He alone abandoned his wife Catherine and only child Mary. If the goal was to ensure a healthy male heir; it might have been prudent to stop sleeping around and curb all the hunting and jousting until this had been accomplished.

    • @elanabethfariss117
      @elanabethfariss117 Před 4 lety +5

      Well stated, Diane. He had so much power, that he could bend every rule to suit his desire, even to his own detriment, and every one else's. Poor Anne, she didn't stand a chance.

    • @gaaraxnaru
      @gaaraxnaru Před 4 lety +4

      @kshiftkometh We don't know who gave him it. There were so many women he slept with, and we'll never know who it originally came from.

    • @cynthiacorcoran9389
      @cynthiacorcoran9389 Před 4 lety +2

      Not true

    • @dianekeane7740
      @dianekeane7740 Před 3 lety +2

      @Christy Axel Norman Yes, I am familiar with the history of the Tudors. Arthur is believed to have contracted tuberculosis, not so much a chill. I believe Henry might have entertained the notion that Leviticus visited him with a dose of Karma, but I think he used it more as an excuse to dump his long suffering, faithful first wife. There is a medical notion that Anne Boleyn miscarried twice after her first child due to an rh factor disorder. In any event, infant mortality was high in those days and girls had a slightly higher survival rate. Peace from Northern Cali.

  • @sherrydrake9578
    @sherrydrake9578 Před 3 lety +6

    They didn't mention that after Henry married Jane Seymore, she died from her first childbirth, giving Henry the son. That son died a young boy around the age of 15. Lots of women died trying to give Henry a son.

    • @victoriabishko4359
      @victoriabishko4359 Před 3 lety +1

      Did not think Harry capable of producing son,are we Sure his wife had Henrys son???!!!!!?

  • @paigeycakey5061
    @paigeycakey5061 Před 3 lety +9

    I’ve visited Catherine’s grave a lot. It’s very sad.

  • @juanvelez8564
    @juanvelez8564 Před 4 lety +12

    I think that it is a great pity that Dr. Lipscomb did not follow the opinions of two very reputable biographers, Alison Weir and Antonia Fraser, in assessing Henry's Narcissistic personality as a factor in his involvement in Anne's downfall, and also her rivalry with Thomas Cromwell.

  • @nimue4325
    @nimue4325 Před 4 lety +47

    What a monster! It would have been better for so many if he had not survived that fall from his horse.

    • @3monsters014
      @3monsters014 Před 4 lety +3

      It would have been a blessing if he would have died. He was no better then Hitler.

    • @twelfthlady847
      @twelfthlady847 Před 4 lety +2

      It would have thrown the country into chaos and another, probably worse, dynastic war than the Wars of the Roses. You'd have some in the country supporting Elizabeth as the next queen and some supporting Mary instead. It's a damn good thing he did survive.

  • @patriciaboone4271
    @patriciaboone4271 Před 3 lety +74

    Henry VIII was a psychopath! He used one wife after another.

  • @rodalston8505
    @rodalston8505 Před 4 lety +111

    I wonder why the good Dr Lipscomb handles old books and manuscripts with apparently ungloved hands

    • @elleh3495
      @elleh3495 Před 4 lety +10

      rod alston i also saw that. It's highly irregular, unless it was a copy for the purpose of the show.

    • @VeraVegetarier
      @VeraVegetarier Před 4 lety +20

      Clean hands are actually better for the books than gloves bc gloves carry more dirt than clean hands - you just need gloves if the book is a health hazard (eg arsenic) or it's with photographs or metals.

    • @leanie9660
      @leanie9660 Před 3 lety +10

      @@VeraVegetarier I think that the need for gloves depends on the book's makeup. Vellum is handled differently than paper. Gloves rip paper, so clean hands are better.

    • @branypoo
      @branypoo Před 3 lety +2

      Common to wonder about this, but it really depends on what it is that’s being handled. There are situations where gloves would be better, and other times simply clean hands.

    • @stardustgirl2904
      @stardustgirl2904 Před 3 lety

      I said the same thing, oils make paper age!

  • @mythoughtswilloffendyou2518

    Knowing he as a man, was the one to blame for failing to produce a son. But once again the women where the ones to be blamed and killed.🧐

    • @ssmiley0908
      @ssmiley0908 Před 4 lety +12

      @HappyandAtheist Don't hate. They're just speaking FACTS😌

    • @joannedeal3418
      @joannedeal3418 Před 4 lety +15

      @HappyandAtheist o look, a misogynist! Are you so ignorant of history? Men, religions and politics (same thing as religion - controlling the masses) have always put women down as second-class and not as important, and convenient to put the blame on when men wanted a scape-goat.

    • @christopherwellens338
      @christopherwellens338 Před 4 lety +4

      Back then, they didn't know that

    • @3monsters014
      @3monsters014 Před 4 lety +3

      @HappyandAtheist its a fact our eggs are X and sperm is either X or Y. Its his Y sperm they just couldn't make the swim. Since women were the ones to pop the babies out they assumed we had full control over gender.

    • @rossshand4385
      @rossshand4385 Před 4 lety

      It was pure luck

  • @AmiNa-nw5ld
    @AmiNa-nw5ld Před 4 lety +124

    And Elizabeth choose not to marry so the Tudor dynasty buried with her

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +19

      Yes, but they were better things to come because Mary Queen of Scots had the claim to the English Throne after Elizabeth. Elizabeth's Council had Mary Queen of Scots executed because Elizabeth didn't want blood on her hands. Elizabeth was Mary's son's godmother and Mary Queen of Scots often called Elizabeth sister because they were cousins. Elizabeth did the right thing by naming James VI of Scotland her heir because his mother, Mary Queen of Scots, would have been next in line after her; and she was executed when James was about 20. By Elizabeth not having an heir to the throne, James VI of Scotland became James I of England. That inevitably joined Scotland and England together with Ireland and that's when Great Britain was formed. It was wise because that meant there was going to be no more war and bloodshed between England and Scotland, as there had been for centuries. Elizabeth did wonderful things like build this huge navy for England. It was something her dad Vision but he didn't ever work on. Elizabeth made it huge and James ruled Great Britain and that's where the King James Bible came from.

    • @teresaseattle
      @teresaseattle Před 4 lety +1

      Even if she married it wouldn’t have continued cause she was a woman

    • @lindahouston9331
      @lindahouston9331 Před 4 lety

      There's a certain karmic justice in that!

    • @4600norm
      @4600norm Před 3 lety +10

      She was terrified of the dangers of child birth (and I don't blame her). Probably the only legitimate reason not to have a female monarch in the days before modern medicine is the high mortality rate during child birth.

    • @colinturner4158
      @colinturner4158 Před 3 lety

      Now we have the Windsor dynasty

  • @onagaali2024
    @onagaali2024 Před 3 lety +3

    I love Suzannah Lipscomb's delivery and professionalism in her documentaries. Great historian and journalist.

  • @MeganTheBagel
    @MeganTheBagel Před 4 lety +38

    Why doesn’t anyone wear gloves while holding/ touching historical objects? Especially paper since the oils from hands may damage it

    • @TheScylla666
      @TheScylla666 Před 4 lety +6

      Some standards have changed. If you wash your hands thoroughly before touching the documents and objects to remove the natural oil of your skin touching it with bare hands can be better than touching them with gloves - the fabric can create traction.

    • @user-uo3tm1dv5i
      @user-uo3tm1dv5i Před 3 lety +4

      i was thinking may be its not originals.....originals to precious even to be taken out of the specially designed box....

  • @krystalk5856
    @krystalk5856 Před 3 lety +28

    “She probably wrote this some time before her execution.”
    Would be weird if she wrote it after.

    • @Daniela-pz9ze
      @Daniela-pz9ze Před 3 lety

      Maybe she meant Anne probably wrote it shortly or days before her execution.

    • @leanie9660
      @leanie9660 Před 2 lety

      Krystal K ....Ha ha...I thought the same thing...but, yeah, she said "some time" not "sometime".

  • @gearoidp
    @gearoidp Před 3 lety +14

    there are some things in this doc:
    1.There is evidence that Anne never entered the tower through "Traitors' gate".
    2.There is very little evidence that Henry's fall jousting aged 44 caused brain damage and a major shift in personality.
    It is not like after the fall he became a maniac tyrant. He was already acting cruel. For example in previous years he had already tossed a devoted wife of twenty years, treated his heir Mary like crap, spilt from the Catholic church because Clement wouldn't yield, killed his father figure Sir Thomas...
    The source given that the king was "unconscious for two hours" (which obviously is a very serious injury) comes from an ambassador that wasn't even present or even in the country; stating in his letter "the king did not speak for two hours". He had heard basically rumours passing on second or third hand information to the Empress. More contemporary sources stated "it was lucky the king had not been killed.... He sustained no injury", "the king took a fall from his horse, but he had no hurt".
    Perhaps the fall did wake Henry up to his own mortality and reinforced the thought that he must take action to produce a male heir. Therefore not waste any more time with a woman with accusations against her. But there isn't much corroboration that this fall had shifted his personality.
    ref: Please look to; Claire Ridgeway for in-depth analysis of the Tudors ;The Anne Boleyn Files and Tudor Society
    czcams.com/video/J7GPXEtMWow/video.html

  • @zeke8701
    @zeke8701 Před 4 lety +33

    Human behavior says Henry wanted to marry Jane and Ann was in the way.

  • @rocioaguilera3613
    @rocioaguilera3613 Před 4 lety +35

    You're right about the frontal lobe, but being unconscious for two hours was because the OCCIPITAL lobe was hurt. Perhaps the frontal lobe was hurt as a reaction to the blow in the back of his head
    Excellent documentary. Thanks

    • @festivelady826
      @festivelady826 Před 4 lety +3

      @Rocio Aguilera - A contrecoup injury, no doubt.

  • @marygurney2810
    @marygurney2810 Před 3 lety +7

    I am always interested in hearing why someone thinks Elizabeth 1 was "the greatest monarch in English history." In my opinion, there were monarchs who did much more than she for the kingdom's culture, education, economy, infrastructure, and military reputation.

  • @SarSantiago
    @SarSantiago Před 3 lety +9

    Every time they handle royal artifacts without gloves I shiver 😖

  • @westfield90
    @westfield90 Před 4 lety +42

    The brutality of the executions and beheadings are so vicious of a so called civilized society.

    • @idontgiveafaboutyou
      @idontgiveafaboutyou Před 4 lety +7

      It still happens in other places too today, just saying

    • @gkelly941
      @gkelly941 Před 3 lety +4

      The common mode of execution was far more cruel than beheading, which was considered a merciful, dignified and humane way to be executed. Far better than being burned to death, or hanged, drawn and quartered. But loss of life was common, and lives were cheap in that day and time.

    • @colinturner4158
      @colinturner4158 Před 3 lety +1

      Thousands of people around the world get murdered massacred every year apparently Henry’s fall was the reason he’s personality changed

    • @colinturner4158
      @colinturner4158 Před 3 lety

      I wouldn’t mind betting there’s more brutality today

  • @jamiecurry
    @jamiecurry Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent! Thank you.

  • @brianeduardo1234
    @brianeduardo1234 Před 4 lety +83

    She certainly did not know her husband's character a dreadful tyrant

    • @doxasophosmoros
      @doxasophosmoros Před 4 lety +1

      If not for that, Elizabeth the queen first never would have existed, so leave her dad alone.. his rule created her reign and protestant rule aka lead to the modern/ western revolution, so grow up!

    • @irenedevilliers1674
      @irenedevilliers1674 Před 3 lety

      @@doxasophosmoros You really make a good point.

  • @darianrose2195
    @darianrose2195 Před 3 lety +27

    I really hope Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn are just absolutely TORMENTING their loving husband in the afterlife. If that isn't justice, I don't know what is.

    • @bcasey2830
      @bcasey2830 Před 3 lety +3

      I like to imagine that his wives and all the people he hurt are hurting him in the same way he did them over and over and over again for all of eternity

  • @elanabethfariss117
    @elanabethfariss117 Před 4 lety +37

    Anyone else feeling their own neck, with those swift sword like sound effects? I do feel for Katherine, although I feel for Anne because she didn't choose Henry, he was a predator, and she was his prey.

  • @lawilder2059
    @lawilder2059 Před 4 lety +51

    Why do we humans allow such evil people to become leaders?

  • @manyi4success
    @manyi4success Před 3 lety +6

    It was not a coincidence that after only 17 days after the death of katherine...hell began to break loose in their lives and marriage.
    You get what you give

    • @carlotta4th
      @carlotta4th Před 3 lety

      Yeah, he had a severe head injury. (Tends to be known to change people's behaviours).

  • @MusicalPrincess1221Princess

    That is a cold-hearted punishment that Henry had given Anne Boylen by having her beheaded at the Tower of London and she doesn’t deserve to be killed like that

    • @sherrydrake9578
      @sherrydrake9578 Před 3 lety +1

      Anne herself had Henry behead courtiers she didn't like. She was no innocent. That was just the way of the world back then in the English court.

  • @crystalfabulous
    @crystalfabulous Před 4 lety +3

    Wonderful documentary

  • @asmashareef9680
    @asmashareef9680 Před 4 lety +85

    Henry didn't have god's backing...unneessary that he killed innocent women

    • @lindaambrose1334
      @lindaambrose1334 Před 4 lety +9

      Asma Shareef he was a serial killer as far as I am concerned..

    • @festivelady826
      @festivelady826 Před 4 lety +3

      @@lindaambrose1334 - In the truest sense of the term.

    • @doxasophosmoros
      @doxasophosmoros Před 4 lety

      If not for that, Elizabeth the queen first never would have existed, so leave her dad alone.. his rule created her reign and protestant rule aka lead to the modern/ western revolution, so grow up!

    • @thereseo6008
      @thereseo6008 Před 2 lety

      @@doxasophosmoros and if Hitler had not existed and destroyed the economy of Europe, America would not have had it’s golden age. Hitler is still a monster and so is Henry. The silver lining does not negate the cloud

  • @Wouldyoujust_
    @Wouldyoujust_ Před 4 lety +91

    Can I just point out how fine the dude playing Henry is?! I'd let him joust me with his lance all day.

    • @traitorjoseph1893
      @traitorjoseph1893 Před 4 lety +9

      Grøss

    • @Wouldyoujust_
      @Wouldyoujust_ Před 4 lety +11

      @@traitorjoseph1893 "En garde, Henry!" 🤘😂

    • @traitorjoseph1893
      @traitorjoseph1893 Před 4 lety +2

      @@Wouldyoujust_ 🤣🤣🤣😬wtf!

    • @Wouldyoujust_
      @Wouldyoujust_ Před 4 lety +4

      @@traitorjoseph1893 😂😂 I'm awful, I know. Lmaoooo!

    • @UnapolegeticallyAProblem
      @UnapolegeticallyAProblem Před 4 lety +19

      Lmfao 😂😂😂😂 I actually laughed out loud! Like I all out ugly laughed.
      He is fine asf... and I usually don't notice gingers

  • @satansgirlfriendxd
    @satansgirlfriendxd Před 3 lety +8

    Perfect documentary! Oh, I loved it. Those actors scenes are brilliant!

  • @fancysfolly554
    @fancysfolly554 Před 4 lety +30

    These Royals were monstrous....I'm so glad Queen Elizabeth isn't like that!!!

    • @Just999Me
      @Just999Me Před 4 lety +7

      She cant afford to be like that in these modern times. There would be actual backlash against her and her overall powers are limited compared to Henry's.

    • @fancysfolly554
      @fancysfolly554 Před 4 lety

      Layla well thank goodness for that!

    • @arleenkratochvil4798
      @arleenkratochvil4798 Před 4 lety

      @@Just999Me N0 loo K95 loo poo loo

    • @fancysfolly554
      @fancysfolly554 Před 4 lety +1

      anny791 well she’s in her 90s ...she can’t be up to too much.

    • @juanvelez8564
      @juanvelez8564 Před 4 lety

      "So different from the home life of our own dear Queen!"

  • @stephengardner399
    @stephengardner399 Před 3 lety +4

    Ironic that their Daughter Elizabeth turned out to be the most revered and accomplished sovereigns of not only the Tudor dynasty, but the in the history of Uk monarchs. A true politician with brains

  • @mustafabuljko4335
    @mustafabuljko4335 Před 4 lety +2

    What a interesting story!! Congrats.

  • @itsroxie9818
    @itsroxie9818 Před 3 lety +39

    I mean karma hit Anne hard, how you get him is how you lose him.

    • @percyweasley9301
      @percyweasley9301 Před 3 lety

      Anne's Karma was good, innocent.

    • @crystalkathuria4381
      @crystalkathuria4381 Před 2 lety

      You are basing this judgement on the premise that it was Anne who seduced the King. Perhaps this is a misogynist view. The King clearly had the power over Anne. It is easy for you to judge her 500 years later. If you were placed in such a precarious situation I wonder how you would have favored.

  • @id3389
    @id3389 Před 3 lety +3

    Yaay I’m so happy to see Dr. Lishman in this documentary!

  • @theonetheone3323
    @theonetheone3323 Před 3 lety +5

    Very sad story from every angle you could think of , I think the take away here is the lesson that if you cause misery to make yourself happy , karma is gonna get to you one way or another , I mean I for one don’t think for a moment that Ann was guilty of any of the charges against her, but she hurt and caused misery to so many people to get the throne and to get the king and as history tells us it was that very king who was the very death of hers .. ironic and very sad

  • @cancrew9774
    @cancrew9774 Před 3 lety +4

    poor cathy... those ppl are so evil. and that poor child mary.

  • @brianeduardo1234
    @brianeduardo1234 Před 4 lety +12

    She does not deal with Thomas Cromwell's role who likely poisoned the waters.... but of course Henry just wanted shut of her...

    • @brianeduardo1234
      @brianeduardo1234 Před 4 lety

      @@LegalesePodcast OK ... point taken but he is likely to have a role in her downfall and the narrator did attribute motivations to Henry VIII - take care and be safe during this difficult time. I did enjoy the documentary

  • @joannej7018
    @joannej7018 Před 3 lety +3

    These two characters, Henry, a husband who betray his wife for another lovers, a man who was blinded by love, or curiosity? A man who abandoned his daughter, Mary, to quench his thirst for another spring, without realizing that he was making his own daughter a monster because she lacks love from a father
    He was a bad man, a bad husband, a bad father
    Later in his life, he blamed the very lover he once do everything for, and get rid of her
    Anne boleyn, indeed a clever woman who knows her worth, but not without flaws, she was a selfish woman, queen was her final goal, her love story was nothing but lust, a sparks soon form a great flame, but die down as fast as it burns
    She marry a ruthless man who do anything for his selfishness, and the end of this relationship, was never a happy ending
    There was no blame to be put upon her child, because Elizabeth never choose who her parents will be when she was born
    From the story i learn that, intelligence without good heart, will only be a dangerous weapon

  • @joannemadden7449
    @joannemadden7449 Před 4 lety +12

    It might just be me, but the Lady presenting this documentary looks amazing like the actress who played Bessie Blount in ( The Tutors ) very beautiful

    • @mnow2040
      @mnow2040 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, Beautiful woman indeed.

  • @mycah1993
    @mycah1993 Před 3 lety +3

    Henry were obsessed to have a son but it was his daughter who brought the glorious times of England. I just hope he was there to watch Queen Elizabeth reign in all of England.

  • @juanitarichards1074
    @juanitarichards1074 Před 4 lety +17

    Actually before she was arrested Anne was living in some fear and dread. She had hinted at it the year before to the French Ambassador. In the weeks leading up to her arrest she had also spent much time in her privy garden, sitting alone and downcast with just her little dogs for company. She knew Henry didn't love her any more and she knew he was courting Jane Seymour. And after that indiscreet conversation with Norris, realizing they had been overheard, she bade Norris go to her almoner. John Skip and swear for the queen that she was a good woman......but John Skip was suspicious and wanted to know why such things should be spoken of. Skip then repeated the conversation to Cromwell, by this time Anne's enemy.......also Anne knew something was up and she did go to Henry with toddler Elizabeth in her arms and they were arguing and the king was furious. This incident was witnessed by Alexander Aless, a great supporter of Anne's. Anne may have feared her marriage might be annulled and she and Elizabeth sent away from court. She likely never dreamed she would be executed on trumped up charges.

    • @poppygirl...
      @poppygirl... Před 4 lety +3

      👍👍

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety +1

      Cromwell started out as a humble servant when he was brought in by Cardinal Wolsey but he turned totally corrupt and turned on Ann to gain favor with the King. He was a secret Lutheran and the King didn't know for years and if you did find out he would have burned him. Years later when it was discovered that Cromwell had as much or more money than the king from taking from The Abbeys, he was taken to the scaffold and chopped to Pieces because nobody in the council liked him at all!! All other council members couldn't stand Cromwell. What he said on the scaffold was for people not to be like him and Learn by his example because his pride was his fall.

    • @juanitarichards1074
      @juanitarichards1074 Před 4 lety

      @@montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Long before that he worked for bankers in Italy and as a mercenary soldier before that. He learned many Machiavellian ways in Italy, seeing how bankers and money lenders operate. His favorite book was The Prince by Machiavelli from which he learned much, but he was always a clever cunning man with a touch of corruption in hos soul before he came to work for Wolsey, and Wolsey was blatantly corrupt, but that didn't bother Cromwell. He and Ann were never as close allies as people thought but he used her when convenient to push through his ideas and plans. But they were divided over the issue of the abbeys. He did get on the wrong side of Henry over the alliance negotiations with the Emperor and he knew he had to do something to distract the king from his anger and save his own ass. I still think the king ordered him to find a way to get rid of Ann permanently, probably threatening Cromwells life if he did not. Cromwell was still a Catholic but had Lutheran sympathies. And all those councilors who hated him didn't hesitate to use him for favors when they wanted something. They were jealous and petty.......years later the king regretted having Cromwell executed on trumped up charges and "by light pretext" of Cromwells enemies. Wolsey and Cromwell were the only 2 ministers who carried the workload of 12 councilors and never complained......they were both treasures to the king and he destroyed them to gain popularity.

    • @sherrydrake9578
      @sherrydrake9578 Před 3 lety

      Anne also knew her only power was to give the King a son and she had failed.

  • @fhuuraliulfr5756
    @fhuuraliulfr5756 Před 4 lety +147

    Well then, that is the first time I am noticing King Henry's "bulge" in that picture lmfao.

    • @risksikrikak903
      @risksikrikak903 Před 4 lety +5

      Yeah pictures can lie.Look at kanye west hanging there w his arms outstretched on a cross like he's measuring something.His lil 5ft arms span, lol!

    • @BhappyD
      @BhappyD Před 4 lety +18

      Fhuura Liulfr Same here! I’ve seen that picture so many times, yet never once noticed it! Even when he tried his hardest, altering images of himself in every way possible, his “masculinity” still goes unnoticed to this day, and admittedly that brings me a little bit of satisfaction! Lol! 😂😂😂

    • @fhuuraliulfr5756
      @fhuuraliulfr5756 Před 4 lety +1

      @@BhappyD lmao yup! he was a bastard!

    • @quibidokerstinizzy5461
      @quibidokerstinizzy5461 Před 4 lety +1

      41:45 Im wheezing

    • @joannemadden7449
      @joannemadden7449 Před 4 lety +4

      Everyone knows a lie when they "see" it, as in the painting. Lol. I guess it's the equivalent to the modern day saying about why a man drives a big truck.

  • @franklinpasko9246
    @franklinpasko9246 Před 3 lety +6

    I love how in many of the reenactments of Henry VIII, they always make him good looking, like in that show "The Tudors". Henry, wasn't a very handsome man at all lol. Anyway, I still don't understand why Henry couldn't be happy with having a female heir. And while some here are calling Queen Elizabeth I the greatest British monarch, I think that title belongs to the current monarch, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. God Save The Queen!

    • @gkelly941
      @gkelly941 Před 3 lety

      Keep in mind that Henry's father became king when Richard III was killed in battle. The ability to lead an army and fight for the throne was a very real part of kingship in Tudor times. And the common view that a queen would be governed by her husband is likely one reason Elizabeth never married.

    • @sherrydrake9578
      @sherrydrake9578 Před 3 lety

      It was believed that a woman could not rule. Many other aristocratic families with a blood line to the throne would have gotten their armies and all fought it out to be the next king of England. It would have destroyed the country in civil war, plus other foreign countries might of invaded and tried to take over England with no male heir.

  • @iiiMEHiii
    @iiiMEHiii Před 3 lety +1

    I love listening to Dr.Lipscomb.

  • @angelabrown7182
    @angelabrown7182 Před 4 lety +33

    Poor Anne.. she didn't commit adultery she knew that would ruin her

  • @rikooangloindianpunjabi5824

    She was mean to Katherine no doubt ...but she didn't deserve a punishment so severe

  • @pamelaalsop7772
    @pamelaalsop7772 Před 4 lety +47

    I had no idea they abused her decapitated head. I'd read somewhere that they exhumed several bodies from below the alter in that church....no dignity of a marker..... two were young females w/ no head. But Anne was right all along.... her daughter would be Queen! Wish she'd had an easier life.... I don't believe she was guilty of the crimes she was convicted of. But, whatever Henry wanted, Henry got.

    • @lorisorabji594
      @lorisorabji594 Před 4 lety +3

      Anne & Katherine Howard are buried with their heads under the alter at the church on the tower grounds.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 Před 4 lety

      Yes! He may not have been a tyrant until after his first outing incident when he was married to Catherine of Aragon about 20 years and first injured his head & leg. He injured himself again during his marriage to Anne about eight years later. The thing about Henry was that he always wanted what he wanted and the first 10 or 15 years of his Reign he had a lust & a passion for war. It wasn't until Mary was over 10 years old and Henry was getting close to 40 years old that he realized he wasted his younger years and Catherine's younger years fighting Wars rather than producing heirs to the throne. Katherine probably wouldn't have had any more children because she had five pregnancies, aside from Mary Tudor. Several miscarriages and one of their babies was a boy but he only live for a month or two and apparently died of SIDS. We know that today, but they didn't know that back then. Catherine could have had polycystic ovarian disease which is known in present day but they didn't know back then that it would cause repeated miscarriages and difficulties getting pregnant and carrying a baby full term.

    • @robertreilly8988
      @robertreilly8988 Před 3 lety

      M

  • @mmjj7685
    @mmjj7685 Před 10 měsíci

    These things are what makes Royalty interesting. Not some boring interview in the media.

  • @juanroth2940
    @juanroth2940 Před 4 lety +14

    What a nice and talented host is Dr Suzannah Lipscomb.

  • @melodyg6702
    @melodyg6702 Před 3 lety +3

    Ow why da heck am i falling in love with these casts actors & actresses 🙈

  • @brontewcat
    @brontewcat Před 4 lety +12

    I think the reason for the rumours about Diana are very different to the reason for the rumours about Anne. I think the main reason is that Charles reputation went downhill because of the admission of his adultery with Camilla. It was more about saying it wasn’t just Charles - that both were unfaithful.
    The reason for the rumours about Anne was to give grounds for the king to get rid of her.

    • @sherrydrake9578
      @sherrydrake9578 Před 3 lety

      Yes Charles was trying to save his reputation. They both had affairs. Diana had several affairs with married men, but she never mentioned that in her interview. She only mentioned that Charles was having affairs with married women and how Camilla should leave her husband a lone.

  • @luciamarston6698
    @luciamarston6698 Před 2 lety

    Excellent thanks.

  • @Tori-vz5er
    @Tori-vz5er Před 3 lety +5

    Anne wasn't buried there, they believe they found her bones in an unmarked grave a century or so later

  • @veronicagraziano7485
    @veronicagraziano7485 Před 3 lety +6

    The narrator and actors are mesmerizing
    This production should be on television I hope to see it soon

  • @edithlewis9330
    @edithlewis9330 Před 4 lety +35

    No matter how anointed a king is , he is still just a man, and has no more right to commit adultery than a woman. God still forbids it. His wives were punished for it and he thought it was allowed just because he was the king. God very much disagrees, and that hasn’t changed. The rules haven’t changed and neither has God’s Word.

    • @twelfthlady847
      @twelfthlady847 Před 4 lety +8

      The reason adultery by a queen was worse was because before the days of paternity tests there was no knowing if any child an adulterous Queen could be carrying was the King's or not. That threw the succession and thus security of the entire country into great risk. Civil wars had been started before over who the rightful heir was. It ran much deeper than a marriage vow, it was literally a national security matter.

    • @marcelleines5176
      @marcelleines5176 Před 4 lety

      he was not anointed

    • @ThothTheAtlanteanK
      @ThothTheAtlanteanK Před 3 lety

      @@twelfthlady847 Well said!!!! Very true!

  • @femke6313
    @femke6313 Před 3 lety +2

    I also once suffered from phantom pregnancy. My period stopped, my breasts were sore and I even imagined that my belly was hard. I didn't want to take a test but when i finally did and it was negative my body went back to normal in a heartbeat got my period on the very next day. Can't imagine gow it mist be like when you can neither confirm or deny a pregnancy and your body keeps telling you you are pregnant but arent and the 40th week passes amd still no baby. Poor women. Even in the egyptian time they had methods to confirm pregnancy why not in this time?

  • @markdavies5066
    @markdavies5066 Před 3 lety +3

    Lady that presented this was top notch and very entertaining to listen to and watch , o and also pretty 👍

  • @zarzartinwin593
    @zarzartinwin593 Před 3 lety +8

    Why is she not wearing gloves when she is holding queen Ann’s prayers book??🤔

  • @celestial.dreamer7028
    @celestial.dreamer7028 Před 3 lety +3

    The story of Anne and Kathrine reminds of the story of the korean queen Inhyun and the consort Jang Ok Jang. But Queen Inhyun was sterile and the king never loved her and she was lonely throughout her life and sadly died at an early age because of disease. Later Jang Ok Jang was executed as she was accused of killing Queen Inhyun through exorcism