Queen Victoria's Private Life Described In Her Own Words | A Monarch Unveiled | Real Royalty

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  • čas přidán 15. 12. 2022
  • Queen Victoria was one of the 19th century's most prolific diarists, sometimes writing up to 2,500 words a day. From state affairs to family gossip, she poured out her emotions onto paper.
    Those close to her were afraid her more alarming opinions might escape in written form, causing havoc. In fact much of her writing was destroyed after her death and her personal journals edited by her daughter. But what survives frequently reveals a woman quite different to the one we think we know. AN Wilson reads her personal journals and unpublished letters and discovers the factors that shaped the queen's personality. From the tortured relationship with her mother, to the dominant men she clung to in search of a father figure and the powerful struggle that made her marriage to Prince Albert a battleground, Queen Victoria was always a woman in search of intimate relationships. As a daughter, a wife, a mother and the queen of a growing empire, as friends and family came and went, her pen remained her constant companion and friend.
    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 • 754

  • @arleneshanley9889
    @arleneshanley9889 Před rokem +308

    Just because she had things doesn't mean she wasn't abused. This kind of thinking is why people who suffer emotional and psychological abuse aren't believed.

    • @Grannievore
      @Grannievore Před rokem +22

      Amen.

    • @mangot589
      @mangot589 Před rokem +18

      Oh god please just stop. She felt sorry for herself like any teenager. She DID go out. Abused? Good god. K let’s play a game. How was she abused? Your move

    • @arleneshanley9889
      @arleneshanley9889 Před rokem +42

      @Mango T If your dismissiveness were any more palpable, I would have actually heard your eyes rolling.

    • @bonnylouwho76
      @bonnylouwho76 Před rokem +29

      True that. Powerful and controlling families, can really be tough on children. This is why it upsets me that the RF is so mad at Harry and Meghan. A gilded cage is still a cage, being forced to be silent is damaging and always has been. In any family anywhere.

    • @roycobb8268
      @roycobb8268 Před rokem +10

      @@bonnylouwho76 , you told it like it is and I thank you! I didn't have such a happy childhood! I told my mother about how she abused me! After she said that she was abused! All she kept saying was " I took care of you didn't I". Someone once told me that she was supposed to do that! But nobody has the right to abuse a child! Children are a gift from God! I feel that anybody who abuses a kid! They might as well give them up for adoption! I chose not to have kids! A wife yes, but kids no! I don't think I would abuse a child of mine! But I feel I'm better off not having none for different reasons! God bless you 🙏,!

  • @Carrie_13
    @Carrie_13 Před rokem +68

    Queen Victoria fascinates me but the way this story was being told by the host in this video is brilliant! He's the best ever!

  • @shelikestuff
    @shelikestuff Před rokem +149

    Being a mother of 9 in those times is something.. childbirth could be deadly and she did it successfully so many times. Wow

    • @NyraBrowniez
      @NyraBrowniez Před 11 měsíci +6

      Imagine what would have happened had she died bearing her first

    • @eh-i1841
      @eh-i1841 Před 9 měsíci +7

      She was only 4’10,so it can’t have been easy.She was given chloroform to ease the pain,though.

    • @christinesentman5437
      @christinesentman5437 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Still happens today

    • @christineduffy3113
      @christineduffy3113 Před 5 měsíci +11

      ​@@eh-i1841She had the best care possible at that time the poor living in the slums of London most likely died

    • @feyrol42
      @feyrol42 Před 4 měsíci +6

      ⁠@@eh-i1841that was only for her two last pregnancies. So she had seven pregnancies with no drugs.

  • @talitam.8414
    @talitam.8414 Před rokem +184

    I don't think she was struggling to have motherly feelings because she was just obsessed with her husband. I think it goes deeper than that and it may have started during her childhood and her relationship with her own mother + unresolved trauma. How can you mother a child when you were not mothered properly yourself.

    • @mangot589
      @mangot589 Před rokem +17

      She wasn’t un mothered”. She was probably over mothered. Albert had much less mothering and he was an EXCELLENT father, or at least he tried. What’s a “proper mother” ANYWAY? Man, wait until you have kids. Good luck there. Did you even watch the video? She realized her mother did love her and was crushed after her mum died. She was just a snotty teenager that had no clue, like we all do. And she grew UP with her sister! And she had a brother, too.

    • @loretta_3843
      @loretta_3843 Před rokem +14

      @@mangot589 like I said in a comment, Victoria was so self indulgent. When her mother was alive, she was just awful, then dead, she was the abandoned little girl who couldn't get over her loss. She would have driven me insane 😕

    • @tamaliaalisjahbana6849
      @tamaliaalisjahbana6849 Před rokem +6

      Exactly. To blame it all on Prince Albert is too simplistic.

    • @talitam.8414
      @talitam.8414 Před rokem +18

      @@mangot589 First of all why are you aggravated? This is not about you. And yes I did watch the entire documentary which I think was great. And by the way you can still very much love your child with all your heart and soul and mess them up or have a fraught relationship with them. The 2 concepts are not mutually exclusive, it is usually what happens. Also the fact that Albert had a more or less problematic relationship with his own mother does not negate what Victoria went through with her own. They were 2 different persons and 2 different kids with different needs, characters and level of resilience. Hell! siblings from the same family need different types of care and don't deal with problems the same way.

    • @firstnamesecondname451
      @firstnamesecondname451 Před rokem +14

      There's also a theory that she suffered from post-partum depression, which is fairly common and, if untreated (which it would have been as it was not a known condition at the time) can lead to long-lasting difficulties in the mother/child relationship

  • @SelinaCat
    @SelinaCat Před rokem +44

    Wow, this guy's interpretation of her childhood is so obtuse. She had no socialization with kids, cut off from the outside world, then had a traumatic event when she was dismissed being close to death.

    • @marthamccabe1477
      @marthamccabe1477 Před rokem +1

      Much of comes from her own writing.

    • @ExtraNope
      @ExtraNope Před 3 měsíci +3

      He also did a ridiculously simple minded impression of Victoria's mother, mocking her for missing her daughter... all while being the real life Sheldon Cooper in all the worst ways.

    • @stephaniemurria5534
      @stephaniemurria5534 Před 2 měsíci +1

      She had a sister and brother that she had contact with regularly.

    • @ajbotte1003
      @ajbotte1003 Před 2 měsíci +2

      As to brother and sister…they were not children she played with…one was 13 years older, one was 11 years older…

    • @SelinaCat
      @SelinaCat Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@stephaniemurria5534 are you suggesting that a young child speaking to siblings counts as childhood play? My OP was saying she grew up to be a narcissistic adult because she was literally deprived of ever having a single friend who she had an emotional connection to. She was a psychologically abused child obviously. Wealth actually increases that risk. People with more to lose (like her mother) rationalize ignoring children's emotional distress "for their own good" to provide for them. But money is genuinely irrelevant to a child. All they know is no one cares about their distress.

  • @shortylucy
    @shortylucy Před rokem +217

    By far, this is my favorite documentary of the Queen Victoria. She was so complicated, so uncensored, a revolutionary. I do wish they would have touched on how she changed animal welfare…. She was pioneer and advocate for animals and pets. Regardless, this was a very informative and beautiful documentary.

    • @anastasiatep7935
      @anastasiatep7935 Před rokem

      Yeah and hhow she advocated for heroin route in Asia to be used by English colonies that killed millions of people in India.yeah what a wonderful women

    • @ebanydwayne1357
      @ebanydwayne1357 Před rokem +10

      Talk more about it! I'm obsessed with her, never knew about this

    • @eunicestone6532
      @eunicestone6532 Před rokem +18

      If she would have just advocated as much for HUMAN WOMEN. She, being a woman, should have done more. Very disappointing that she thought more of dogs.

    • @mrsmarple2655
      @mrsmarple2655 Před rokem +3

      It was Prince Albert, not Victoria.

    • @tordyclark
      @tordyclark Před rokem +9

      @@eunicestone6532 I mean yeah. I don't see how VIctoria was revolutionary or in fact anything other than a stone on the throne. Inherited position. The Victorians did more to mess future women up than to help them. Men too TBH.

  • @ronj5714
    @ronj5714 Před rokem +73

    I just love how the narrator flips from the British accent into the German accent when he refers to who was speaking. Such a delight. Well done.

  • @okiejammer2736
    @okiejammer2736 Před rokem +46

    Love this. Very well done. Non-biased, very well researched. And INTERESTING. I learned so much.

  • @Yoyomakeawickedcupofcocoa

    I love this guy! He’s so theatrical when reading quotes.

    • @mommajan1
      @mommajan1 Před 3 měsíci

      yes, what is his name?

    • @carolannemckenzie3849
      @carolannemckenzie3849 Před 19 dny +1

      He name is A N Wilson. He is a marvellous writer, mainly of biographies, and a national treasure

  • @dr.barrycohn5461
    @dr.barrycohn5461 Před rokem +40

    One of the better docs on this queen. Brings HER to life way more than many other than focus boringly from the outside of her. Well done.

    • @lindafields2326
      @lindafields2326 Před rokem

      Torturer of India. Empress... Pah!

    • @isabellind1292
      @isabellind1292 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@lindafields2326 Doom and gloom...no need to invite you to any parties!

  • @garymeise673
    @garymeise673 Před rokem +232

    I have seen so many Victoria documentaries and I really love this one. I still learned some things new and I'm grateful that the focus was her diaries and letters. And thank God you guys got Anna Chancellor to read them she's brilliant. That really sealed the deal.

    • @ashleelarsen5002
      @ashleelarsen5002 Před rokem +7

      Cool, thanks 👍🏻

    • @jharder2094
      @jharder2094 Před rokem +5

      Wonderful documentary. Saw first on local PBS affiliate, which ran series twice! I always pick up more on who this remarkable person was.

    • @beverlytaylor636
      @beverlytaylor636 Před rokem +1

      @@ashleelarsen5002 ....................................................,,

    • @beverlytaylor636
      @beverlytaylor636 Před rokem

      " ccc. CFL

    • @ashleelarsen5002
      @ashleelarsen5002 Před rokem +1

      @@beverlytaylor636 huh?

  • @lizzabug87
    @lizzabug87 Před rokem +18

    21:42 I think it’s wrong for him to exclaim that the myth of her unhappy childhood began. She is the only one who lived her childhood, she knows what she felt, just because she played with dolls and dressed up her dog doesn’t mean she was not abused or unhappy, she probably would have been clinging to the little things that brought her joy. He shouldn’t speak on her experience as such. 😢

  • @greggc.touftree5936
    @greggc.touftree5936 Před rokem +43

    Ahh yes, A.N. Wilson. He makes it so easy to enjoy English history. An Englishman that we think was like the past, but only the modern world could create.

    • @davidpaterson1435
      @davidpaterson1435 Před rokem +2

      English history?? There hasn't been an English Monarch since 1707.

  • @MichielBLKorte
    @MichielBLKorte Před rokem +9

    This documentary does glorify John Brown a bit. Victoria's children had reasons enough to dislike him. His younger brother was appointed as a servant to Prince Leopold and physically abused him for months. When the Queen was told this, John Brown assured her it was a lie, even though it wasn't. John Brown was also responsible for reporting all Bertie's actions to the Queen and exagerating his sins in Paris to distance mother and son. He had awful rows with Princess Louise because he thought her too loose and disapproved of her lover. Brown also allegedly (no proof) fondled Queen Victoria's underage daughters, he bullied Prince Arthur and maids later said they'd been scared to tell the Queen that Brown had touched them inappropriately.

    • @feyrol42
      @feyrol42 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I've heard all of these things and believe them, but I never heard that he assaulted Victoria’s daughters. Where did you hear that?

  • @newyardleysinclair9960
    @newyardleysinclair9960 Před rokem +11

    I love how they cut to the cleaning guy vacuuming after the host walked by up the stairs as if to say "wtf man!?" It's like they knew what they audience would think

  • @MegCazalet
    @MegCazalet Před rokem +86

    I’ve seen Anna Chancellor read Queen Victoria, and her own ancestor, Jane Austen. She’s amazing. I wonder if she’s narrated any audiobooks. And she played the perfect Lucia in the Mapp & Lucia miniseries several years ago. She’s just such a delight.

    • @mevinscott948gmail
      @mevinscott948gmail Před rokem

      hello how you?

    • @samanthasmith61
      @samanthasmith61 Před rokem +6

      where can i see her Jane Austen one.
      she was descendants of Murray, Finch Hatton, Edward Knight Austen. her great"" grandmother was Lady Elizabeth Murray who lived with the first black aristocat Dido belle, she then marry Finch Hatton and met jane austen several times
      Lady Elizabeth's son and heir George finch hatton 10th Earl of winchilsea married Fanny rice ( daughter of Jane Austen's niece Elizabeth Austen Knight)
      that's how they are connected to everyone

    • @ellenamontana1352
      @ellenamontana1352 Před rokem +2

      I thought Jane Austin had no children?

    • @samanthasmith61
      @samanthasmith61 Před rokem +2

      @@ellenamontana1352 she descended from Edward Knight Austen, Jane's rich brother who got adopted by Knight family.

    • @MegCazalet
      @MegCazalet Před rokem +5

      @@ellenamontana1352 “Ancestors” are not only direct line, though that’s considered most significant. Chancellor is the great-niece of Jane Austen eight generations removed, through Jane’s brother Edward Austen Knight, who was adopted by the wealthy Knight family to be their heir. Subsequently Edward was the most wealthy and powerful in Jane’s family during her lifetime, as well as among the closest, her favorite niece being Fanny Knight. That line of Austens did a lot to carry on Jane’s legacy and promote her in the mid-Victorian era, spring boarding her into a fashionable classic author of British Lit, as she of course deserves.

  • @jillkursner6494
    @jillkursner6494 Před měsícem +7

    A remarkable woman.
    Simply giving birth to nine children ,in those times, was an achievement in it's self.

  • @mw4724
    @mw4724 Před rokem +53

    Wish there were more documentaries on Victoria. So hard to find good ones like this one

  • @tiffanystidham5329
    @tiffanystidham5329 Před 3 měsíci +1

    This is one of the best British Royal documentaries I've watched on CZcams! I love the narrator -- he's a great story teller, & transports me back to QV's life/reign, like I'm watching her relive her life. I also love the woman who's reading the passages from QV's journals -- I could listen to her read/talk all day long. Lol 🖤👑

  • @missfittrr
    @missfittrr Před 6 měsíci +10

    Unfortunately one of her daughters chose to destroy much of her writing/letters after QV died which would have given even more insight to the inner Victoria which was allegedly what her daughter feared!

    • @user-ww5lg9xv1s
      @user-ww5lg9xv1s Před měsícem

      I guess her daughter was a control freak like her father.

  • @katd.2000
    @katd.2000 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Anyone have a giggle when he had the German accent when reading excerpts from Albert’s letters? 😂

  • @YankeeinTexas812
    @YankeeinTexas812 Před 8 měsíci +10

    Queen Victoria was such a fascinating woman/ monarch . It’s amazing how she journaled everything. Too bad her children destroyed what she had written about her relationship with John Brown .

    • @sophiachavez3377
      @sophiachavez3377 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Yes, but maybe it was better she was allowed her privacy.

  • @reneemellott8612
    @reneemellott8612 Před rokem +24

    This is an excellent documentary that truly enjoyed ❤️ thank you for sharing with us!!

  • @tonics7121
    @tonics7121 Před rokem +7

    This presentation is both honest and respectful, revealing and kind. Thank you for truth without ugliness. A plank well walked.

  • @ElizabethWarrenYeahYeah
    @ElizabethWarrenYeahYeah Před rokem +21

    From minimalist to knick-knackery!
    Priceless 😂

  • @ps603
    @ps603 Před rokem +20

    One has to wonder if powerful people long for someone to "Take Control" in private. It seems that more than one royal may have felt this way.

  • @brendadrew834
    @brendadrew834 Před rokem +33

    Fascinating, love this! An "Anglophile" and proud of my British background on my American maternal side which goes all the way back to William the Conqueror and 1066! The Drew family is one of the oldest families in the UK and is mentioned in William's Doomsday book where he compiled all the landowners and original families in England. Cheers from Yankee New England were we still have some similar customs here like authentic English teas at historic inns , hotels and homes and many of the historic towns and cities here are named after the ones in the UK ever since the 1600s/1700s, like Plymouth and Boston, the cradle of our hard won democracy just 246 years ago. In the time frame of 1000 years, really not that long ago when you look at those numbers!♥♥

    • @ccc4102
      @ccc4102 Před rokem +3

      Very interesting, thank you.

    • @josephpacetexas
      @josephpacetexas Před rokem +1

      You write very beautifully.

    • @kincaidwolf5184
      @kincaidwolf5184 Před měsícem

      Love everything that you said, but William the Conquer is now viewed as a villain. He genocided the English population. My family pre-dates the invasion.

  • @larashortneecorreia2418
    @larashortneecorreia2418 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Since I moved here from SA, I am so glad to see all the history buildings and stories. Then I saw this Queen Victoria wow, it is revealing that she loves writing, so her life is pen and paper, love this history of Victoria.

  • @edwardslicker6126
    @edwardslicker6126 Před rokem +14

    He doesn't give Albert his due...nor talks through the deal between them

  • @FigaroHey
    @FigaroHey Před 11 měsíci +11

    Do they actually ever PROVE that Albert 'punished' Victoria for resenting his domination? She is described as someone desperately seeking a father-figure, which means WANTING someone like a father to tell you what to do, guide you, protect you, relieve you of the need to figure out and control everything on your own. Then they say that having got a husband she never ceases to bless God for, her mainstay, they make him into a villain, even though of course he could not legally ever wield ANY political power. Like ANY happily married person, she thinks that her husband (or wife, as the case may be) is the one partner you rely on, turn to, and trust FIRST before anyone else.
    I help prepare young couples for marriage, and only rarely have I seen a couple in which one or both of the partners thinks the other person's advice or ideas or preferences or 'ways' are contemptable. I advised the couples strongly NOT to marry. When I see couples who feel that the other person is the first person they turn to, who always want to know what the other one thinks, who takes their partner's opinion and input as the most trustworthy and reliable, then I know they will make a good marriage partnership.
    I don't know why they are saying that a woman from that era, especially, who always wanted father-like approval from men, had to be controlled or manipulated by her husband to act as Victoria did. She was acting perfectly in character for a woman deeply in love with a husband she admires and respects. I think feminism has so twisted the views of some of the presenters in this programme that they are filtering Victoria through their own prejudices. If her husband was such a monster, she'd have breathed a sigh of relief after Albert died, not mourned him for decades. You don't mourn an abuser.

    • @sophiachavez3377
      @sophiachavez3377 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Ah, but some do. You are familiar with the Stockholm Syndrome, aren’t you?

    • @blahblahblahblah729
      @blahblahblahblah729 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Exactly, and this was in the 1800s, of course the husband would lead and control. Victoria herself didn't even want woman to vote! Why are people surprised that her husband was in charge? She was a conservative woman.

    • @dominaevillae28
      @dominaevillae28 Před měsícem

      @sophiachavez3377
      You’re aware, aren’t you that Stockholm Syndrome is is a term created to cover up complainant from hostages of police incompetence?

  • @lisagfrerer9429
    @lisagfrerer9429 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Excellent documentary, best one ive seen in a long while. Im going to watch it again now :)

  • @colleenmadden1745
    @colleenmadden1745 Před rokem +34

    Queen Victoria would have been all over social media and instagram. Reposting the latest drama, #blessed pictures of Albert helping out with the cute kids 😂

    • @factcheckersbranch
      @factcheckersbranch Před rokem

      There is nothing was nothing cute about her and her kids. The royal family are nothing but a, out of date draconian black mark upon this once great nation of Grea Britain.

  • @tamaliaalisjahbana6849
    @tamaliaalisjahbana6849 Před rokem +11

    It did not go from estrangement to mourning her mother's loss when she died. In between Prince Albert intervened to heal the rift with her mother. Also, a lot of her anger probably came from her childhood. The models she had and the fear and frustration she felt. It is not really fair to blame all of it on Prince Albert. Also, his idea to move the monarchy towards a more constitutional monarchy in facing face republicanism was a very good move. It may well have saved her monarchy what with her tendency to go against the will of parliament. He also seems to have been very kind to their children. Had Vicky's husband survived longer, Germany's fate would have been very different carrying out Albert's liberal beliefs. Compared to a lot of men at that time he actually does not sound bad. She loved him very much and says that he made her happy. I would tend to take her word for it.

    • @user-ww5lg9xv1s
      @user-ww5lg9xv1s Před měsícem

      His original goal and deal with her mother was to take control of the monarchy. In order to do this he had to push Victoria down, make her feel inadequate. Typical narcissist.

  • @christoffellner84
    @christoffellner84 Před rokem +12

    What an interesting documentation. The life of Victoria, as a Queen, woman, wife, mother, daughter, sister, shows how much the women of the 19th century are still in the shadows of myths and prejudice. Time for them to come to stage.
    Btw. Would it be possible to have such a documentation on the Belgian Kings and Queens?

    • @tarful58
      @tarful58 Před rokem +1

      She was actually the only child, so she was never a sister.

    • @christoffellner84
      @christoffellner84 Před rokem +5

      @@tarful58 Not precisely. Victoria has had two older half siblings (a brother: Karl, Prince of Leiningen; and a sister: Feodora of Hohenlohe-Langenburg) from an earlier marriage of her mother.

  • @larkatmic
    @larkatmic Před rokem +29

    She was humbled later in life, because she grew obese depressed and lonely. When she broke from her depression, she recognized life wasn’t all about appearances, but friendship and true companionship.

    • @zzzbbbooo
      @zzzbbbooo Před rokem +2

      In fact, the older she got the more she grew OUT of the depression she fell into after the deaths of Albert and her mother close together.

  • @lchan90a
    @lchan90a Před rokem +20

    Thank you so much for sharing! 🙏🙏

  • @piushalg8175
    @piushalg8175 Před rokem +7

    To say that Queen Victoria Ruled (the world) is very exageratd if not untrue. As a constitunional monarch she had to be consulted and iinfomed by the prime minister and she could give advise to him. The real center of power was the parliament.

  • @dondavis5633
    @dondavis5633 Před 5 měsíci +1

    A well-crafted, fascinating biography which I very much enjoyed. Thanks so much!

  • @giselematthews7949
    @giselematthews7949 Před rokem +14

    A N Wilson has been around FOREVER.. I like him. He is a good presenter

    • @davidpaterson1435
      @davidpaterson1435 Před rokem

      He talks utter nonsense. There hasn't been an English Monarch since 1707. Mouth full of marbles and doesn't know the basics of the topic he is talking about 🤣

  • @lindapepper1067
    @lindapepper1067 Před rokem +82

    Surprising to see the diaries being handled without gloves to protect the paper from body oils.

    • @vijayaprabu6669
      @vijayaprabu6669 Před rokem +31

      These are copies... I belive and not original

    • @harridan.
      @harridan. Před rokem +7

      @@vijayaprabu6669 excellent point.

    • @dusanputnik
      @dusanputnik Před rokem +6

      If any original ever existed :)

    • @Vintage_Chronicles
      @Vintage_Chronicles Před rokem +47

      I work with old books professionally. It depends where you are working, but gloves aren’t needed. Washing and drying your hands is preferable. We have noticed gloves make people a little clumsier with pages and can cause more harm than good. We don’t recommend them and neither do many other institutions.
      But as stated above, these seem to be copies.

    • @user-ix1rp9ff3p
      @user-ix1rp9ff3p Před rokem +21

      again with the whinging about handling old papers
      *MANY TIMES PROVEN WEARING GLOVES INCREASES PAPER DAMAGE*

  • @wishingwelladventures
    @wishingwelladventures Před rokem +7

    Your research and quality of story telling is excellent. Who keeps a journal these days. Imagine if they had Facebook and twitter.

  • @melissasaint3283
    @melissasaint3283 Před rokem +14

    1:02:25 "marriage does infantalize people"
    What a sweeping stereotype!
    Did it infantalize Albert?
    We can hardly take her experience of her marriage, at a very young age, to apparently an emotionally abusive, controlling person who wanted to be as much the King as possible, particularly after tween and teen years spent in extremely similar circumstances, as a typical example, can we?
    Getting up and not knowing what to wear unless our partner tells us, is absolutely not typical, and not a great sign of a person in a healthy situation.

    • @user-ww5lg9xv1s
      @user-ww5lg9xv1s Před měsícem

      I would think that her ladies would help her dress appropriately, If this was the case with her husband, he was definitely and abusive narcissist,

  • @carolynkennedy1083
    @carolynkennedy1083 Před 2 měsíci +2

    John Brown wasn't an Albert substitute- he was a father substitute.

  • @kendralynn897
    @kendralynn897 Před rokem +31

    I don’t think I’ve ever seen a documentary put such a negative spin on Albert. Very interesting..

    • @teresa9613
      @teresa9613 Před rokem +5

      I thought the same thing. I don't quite buy it.

    • @sophiachavez3377
      @sophiachavez3377 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Yes, but probably true. He was a man and a German one at that.

  • @ebanydwayne1357
    @ebanydwayne1357 Před rokem +28

    Victoria will always live, overlooking the streets and parks in all the continents with statues of her, through the memories and legacies and stories of families, her letters, biographies and movies made about her.
    She is the greatest Briton and ever will be.

    • @virginiasoskin9082
      @virginiasoskin9082 Před 8 měsíci +2

      IMHO, Churchill tops her in saving the UK during their worst crisis in history.

    • @ebanydwayne1357
      @ebanydwayne1357 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@virginiasoskin9082 Let me rephrase then, shes the greates female breton in history (which may be debatable because of Boudica and Elizabeth I, but imo still Queen Vicky)

  • @marta9127
    @marta9127 Před 10 měsíci +7

    This is an excellent lesson in secrets of a historian's work. So much depends on the interpretation of the sources. Which view is accurate? 🤔🤷🏻‍♀️ Ultimately it depends on the scholar with his own framework 😅 And his/her viewpoint on life and values he/she professes. Watching documentaries, reading books we should always remember that this is not the objective truth that we see, but the interpretation through someone's (the authors') glasses, marked by their own assumtions. This film reveals more of the author's attitude towards marriage, social relations and his view on womanhood, feminism and royalty than of anything else, I guess. With some statements I can agree, some others seem to be just emotional interpretations having no foundation in the source texts... 😅 One has to watch this critically, though. Thank you for sharing 👍🏻

  • @bunnymad5049
    @bunnymad5049 Před rokem +5

    Fabulous. Thank you!

  • @user-ix1rp9ff3p
    @user-ix1rp9ff3p Před rokem +15

    1:05:18-1:05:20
    understatement; *Vicky inherited her mother's lack of fashion sense* which was also reflected in their correspondences
    (Eugénie even had to send a carefully measured mannequin with the latest French fashions)
    1:10:56-1:10:58
    as explained in 1:11:03-1:11:16, initially Victoria & Vicky didn't like Alex, who along with her siblings the children of Christian IX *burned for revenge over Schleswig-Holstein* ; eventually both gave way because *there was no other potential candidates left* who could basically "tame" Bertie

  • @cherylcallahan5402
    @cherylcallahan5402 Před rokem +17

    *Queen Victoria in her own word's appreciate your videos Listening 🌟 from Mass USA TYVM 💙 Queen Victoria 👸*

  • @user-fq8rs7rz3i
    @user-fq8rs7rz3i Před 6 měsíci +2

    She always gives me the creeps when I hear about her. She comes across as insensitive, uncaring and cruel. I really haven’t been able to feel one good thing about her. I don’t think I’ve ever had such a reaction towards a member of our royal family.

  • @racheldoesacrylic4089
    @racheldoesacrylic4089 Před rokem +9

    great to find out so much history thankyou x

  • @Jpturlax01
    @Jpturlax01 Před rokem +14

    Wait wait wait...
    Albert: Why don't you adore the children more?
    Victoria: BECAUSE I WANT YOU ALL TO MYSELF! (absolutely no red flags here)
    Narrator: And so, despite Albert's conniving and selfish nature, Victoria nevertheless strove harder, working hard on herself...
    Yeah, I don't think it was herself she needed to work on.

    • @LivingLegendMe
      @LivingLegendMe Před rokem +8

      She was pregnant most of the time. If only Albert had given it a rest.

    • @dianakidd4219
      @dianakidd4219 Před rokem

      @@LivingLegendMe
      Sounds to me like Victoria loved sex. After Albert it was the Scot.

    • @bonnylouwho76
      @bonnylouwho76 Před rokem +8

      @@LivingLegendMe I always thought of that as well. He kept her pregnant in part because he wanted to BE the KING! Had to keep wielding his torch.

    • @blahblahblahblah729
      @blahblahblahblah729 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@bonnylouwho76 She kept getting pregnant because they kept having sex, and she wanted it as much as he. When a doctor told her to stop having sex to not have more children as it could be riscky for her health, she was sadded and asked what were they supposed to do at night.

  • @Blessings.429
    @Blessings.429 Před rokem +10

    I own a seal that is Empress of India Seal Ring. Gold seal in either silver or white gold. I know nothing about the ring or how I come to have it….I wore that and a necklace with bust of Queen Elisabeth on the day of Elizabeth’s funeral and for the next 10days, it was my pleasure to remember the 2 greatest Queens in my opinion.💖💖💖

  • @riverdonoghue9992
    @riverdonoghue9992 Před 18 dny

    Really enjoyed this.

  • @rhondaflowers3824
    @rhondaflowers3824 Před 2 měsíci

    Omg! Keep it coming 🎉

  • @railireid1757
    @railireid1757 Před rokem +4

    Very Captivating with so notable care for photography. Full of details and well acted!La personalità che sembra realizzare pienamente e quasi incarnare un'epoca storica

  • @jensmith4005
    @jensmith4005 Před rokem +5

    1:35:45 I love that her chair was adjusted to her height. As I am the same height as her according to Google, I understand this wonderful consideration made to her.
    Wonderful documentary! Oh how I wish her diaries were not edited/destroyed.

    • @sunnyadams5842
      @sunnyadams5842 Před rokem +4

      I sooo wish her diaries hadn't been messed with, too. I am not convinced that QV asked Beatrice to clean them up, post mortem. The request might have been made in writing - I haven't researched that at all, yet. If not, I'm not at all willing to overlook her forthrightness and sense of her own appropriateness.
      She even published some of her works while she was alive and didn't edit them. Divine Right goes a long way to believing that one cannot misstep.

  • @stevenbrown6277
    @stevenbrown6277 Před 7 měsíci

    Great documentary. Thank you.

  • @Davidfooterman
    @Davidfooterman Před rokem +13

    Victoria, despite being thoroughly German, has a reputation that survives two world wars against her country of origin of being one of our most revered ‘English’ monarchs. That is an extraordinary achievement on her part.

  • @andycam4645
    @andycam4645 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Love AN Wilson! He is a brilliant biographer.

  • @Davidfooterman
    @Davidfooterman Před rokem +4

    However, regarding the content, I have nothing but respect for this great chronicler of English history.

  • @FigaroHey
    @FigaroHey Před 11 měsíci +6

    Her stern advice to her daughter trying to warn her off marriage... partly sounds like her own revulsion at her bodily functions on the one hand, and a case of 'turning into her mother' on the other: trying to 'spare' or 'protect' a child by going way too far in warning the child off taking adult steps in life. She's doing to her own daughter what her mother tried to do to her: control her future in the name of 'protecting' the child.

    • @virginiasoskin9082
      @virginiasoskin9082 Před 8 měsíci +4

      I think the term is infantilizing. Her Mother even made her take someone's hand to go down stairs even as a teen -- so she wouldn't fall. Geez. And then somehow Conroy wormed his way into the relationship between Victoria and her mother; he hectored, bossed, and insinuated himself, to the point that when Victoria lay ill, he tried to get her to sign over her royal rights so he could be her regent. Luckily she refused. Victoria was disgusted when Vicky her daughter was breastfeeding Wilhelm. HORRORS! This is what the lowest classes do; yet it is the healthiest way to bring up a baby without allergies. It cements a mother's closeness to a baby. Victoria missed all that bonding; she thought babies were like frogs, laboring and nursing women like cows. She missed so much by being made queen so young. She enjoyed her kids more once they were older, but really Albert was in charge of playing with them and educating them. I always feel that if these royal kids were able to go to school with other everyday children, develop their own friendships, act like normal kids without special treatment, they would learn some confidence, independence, and experience the lives their subjects do. However, at Gordonstoun School, Prince Charles was terribly bullied. If he would have been able to go to local London elementary through HS education, he might have turned out more normal. Royal life is NO way near normal. I don't know how they exist inside their bubbles even though terribly wealthy. It is kind of sickening really.

  • @MamieLouiseAnderson
    @MamieLouiseAnderson Před 22 dny

    Beautifully read… marvelously told, this is the perfect compliment to the PBS series, “Victoria”
    Thank you.

  • @FigaroHey
    @FigaroHey Před 11 měsíci +4

    They way they make Albert into a manipulative control-freak seems to me over the top, and also makes Victoria seem like a complete ninny. She was controlled by a 'hormonal cloud'? Come right out and accuse her of 'hysteria' and 'feminine weakness' why don't you? She was passionately in love with Albert and he put up with a LOT of crap and public resentment and English xenophobia as well as being effectively cut off from any possibility to prove himself as a man on the world stage, so he must have been passionately in love with her. He's not a controller, she's not a hysterical female. They are complex people in an extraordinary situation and deeply in love. Of COURSE there were sparks. Doesn't make him a demon and her a fool or tool.

  • @ImAmerasian
    @ImAmerasian Před 9 měsíci +3

    Entertaining and informative. Speaking in a German accents was awesome! Absolutely love it.

  • @mariaconnolly6672
    @mariaconnolly6672 Před 9 měsíci +1

    ❤❤❤ Absolutely brilliant 👍 so informative, makes her feel more real ❤❤🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧

  • @stephanieredden8861
    @stephanieredden8861 Před 2 dny

    Nice video and worth the two hour watch. The narrator was wonderful and I loved his salmon suit, worn with his green Converse sneakers. He was a sharp dressed man throughout.

  • @Davidfooterman
    @Davidfooterman Před rokem +4

    Mozart piano sonatas, like the well-chosen fragment of one of the C-majors heard here, with their elegant, light 18th century structure, match the straightforward emotional expression of Victoria herself, but not the self-aggrandizing Victorian’ style of her 19th century Britain. She was a fish out of water, a simple German countrywoman surrounded by an urban, palatial complex at the heart of the colonial British empire, which must have intensified her sense of loss after Albert was gone. The iconic statue outside the Buckingham Palace grounds sums it up - the imposing body image with the tiny crown on her head, being as much of a burden as she was able and willing to carry.

  • @loretta_3843
    @loretta_3843 Před rokem +6

    I can't help it, I find Victoria very self indulgent. I find myself very annoyed with her so often.

  • @CarolinaFrasineanu-rp3xw
    @CarolinaFrasineanu-rp3xw Před 6 měsíci +1

    Very interesting documentary,i really liked it, thank you

  • @emilyaustralis
    @emilyaustralis Před měsícem +2

    I am one of the descendants of King William IV and his mistress Dorothea Jordan née Bland an Anglo-Irish actress and courtesan . He was still the Duke of Clarence . All of their 10 illegitimate children whom survived took the surname FitzClarence.

  • @sedonarose7563
    @sedonarose7563 Před rokem +16

    I feel so much for Victoria and the toll of bearing and raising children and the demand and yet I also feel for her children who felt unloved.
    I feel like I am her. We women are “supposed” to just “loooove” having babies and being mothers and nurturers but the truth is that it is very hard and grueling work. Work. It is work.
    I think more women struggle with this expectation placed on us than is given credit. I’m so grateful that in today’s culture I am able to do work and labor outside of childcare and support my family.
    I am so much happier working out in the public in the medical field than working as a caregiver for raising children. It’s so nice to come home at the end of the day and enjoy my kids as their mother and not be utterly exhausted from having worked all day being a child caregiver.
    And for those men and women who feel fulfillment in child caring and child educating, you have my gratitude for your help in bringing up and loving children

    • @dianakidd4219
      @dianakidd4219 Před rokem +4

      Victoria had nanny’s. I doubt she ever changed a diaper.

    • @juliethompson340
      @juliethompson340 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Victoria gave birth to 9 children. She hated pregnancy and the agony of labor and the birthing process. Her babies had a wet nurse and nannies. She kept getting pregnant because she loved having sex..a lot of sex. Lucky, Albert, had to keep up with her. They might have tried some form of birth control at some point (after they figured out how she got pregnant) otherwise, she could have had a lot more kids. I wonder how she satisfied her sexual appetite after poor Albert died.

  • @shelbyiscool9420
    @shelbyiscool9420 Před rokem +7

    17:50 makes me feel like I sat next to a person on the train that's telling me something and I'm just sitting there like 🤓 great documentary though!

  • @lakeshagadson357
    @lakeshagadson357 Před rokem +20

    love history as well as literature

    • @davidpaterson1435
      @davidpaterson1435 Před rokem

      Love the History??? There hasn't been an English Monarch since 1707.

  • @emilinebelle7811
    @emilinebelle7811 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Her handwriting is so pretty! But I can’t read a word of it. Fascinating !
    18:21

  • @barbaraclark8693
    @barbaraclark8693 Před rokem +12

    Fantastic maybe the new monarchy should review there history well done

  • @ElizabethWarrenYeahYeah
    @ElizabethWarrenYeahYeah Před rokem +4

    Some of the shots of the countryside are of another part of Scotland miles away from Balmoral.
    It's a familiar skyline but not Lochnagar and Balmoral.

  • @Lemieux_7
    @Lemieux_7 Před rokem +2

    Greg, I feel ya. I refuse to watch the Netflix show. Thanks for taking 1 for the team 😂

  • @joannem6878
    @joannem6878 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I was shocked at how much Beatrice looks just like Victoria when she was young.

  • @user-hg2or7cb3d
    @user-hg2or7cb3d Před 2 měsíci

    Great Programme.

  • @Davidfooterman
    @Davidfooterman Před rokem +4

    She was well schooled: Conroy and her mother taught her how and what not to be; then, Melbourne and Albert took a blank slate and did pretty well with it. If those two had been of both less and lesser moral stature, we might not be as fortunate in the legacy she left us. Conroy was the ‘not amused’ Victorian; Melbourne and Albert were amusable and amusing; and Victoria could be amused!

    • @Davidfooterman
      @Davidfooterman Před rokem

      Albert ‘did pretty well’? No, I think I might have misspoken on that one!

  • @nativetexan53
    @nativetexan53 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Why do people not believe a person when they say they were unhappy and abused as a child??? WTF?

    • @dominaevillae28
      @dominaevillae28 Před měsícem

      @nativetexan53
      Why don’t people believe when they subsequently say that their mother is beloved and the best mother ever, wtf!?

    • @aubreyl5531
      @aubreyl5531 Před měsícem

      If Victoria had been "Victor" I wonder what the tone of this biography would be

  • @gescheharm5881
    @gescheharm5881 Před rokem +1

    What a fascinating review, I enjoyed every minute. Not so much so the mock German accent.

  • @jennifereguakhide4176
    @jennifereguakhide4176 Před 7 měsíci

    Lovely documentary on Queen Victoria.

  • @cerwelt
    @cerwelt Před rokem +3

    What a lovely jewel of a documentary.

  • @amandamariechristinadavis110

    I really liked this documentary on her.

  • @kenyonbissett3512
    @kenyonbissett3512 Před rokem +4

    I believe they loved each other without intercourse. A prolapse uterus does not preclude an orgasm. He gave her what Albert could not due to his ambition and coldness. John Brown gave her devotion and his absolute attention. He encouraged her to be a better person, something she had wanted as a teen and young woman before the fog of desire and pregnancy robbed her the ability. No competition with a child’s love or a political career drawing John Brown from her. John Brown had no interest in politics or power, just her, her as a person and woman. What a lucky woman she was.

  • @Caniacaniago007
    @Caniacaniago007 Před rokem +5

    I really like watching your videos, good job Brother, always successful

  • @name1of3
    @name1of3 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I adore that the letters were bound into books. How glorious.

  • @latetotheparty4785
    @latetotheparty4785 Před rokem +2

    I was raised in a small Cornish community in Northern California. After all the placer gold (nuggets loose in rivers) was gone, gold veins were found in the local granite. The Cornish came with their mining expertise and my hometown of Grass Valley sits on top of miles of shafts. We referred to the them as Cousin Jacks and Cousin Jennies, these terms never used pejoratively. There was record album of the carols in the 70s, and Grass Valley still celebrates Cornish Christmas carols yearly. One thing that has not gone over so well are traditional Cornish pasties. Imagine a small calzone or chicken pot pie, filled with tasteless potato, boiled chicken in plain white sauce, the pastry pale and tough. These meat pies were for miners to take into the mines, so they were functional, not gourmand. It could take hours to get to the level of your mine, and the pasties had to survive until warmed and eaten. Two pastie shops opened at the same time in Grass Valley around 1970 and those of us who ventured to make a purchase made that mistake only once. There is still a pastie shop open, I’m sure the chef has greatly improved both flavor and texture, but I’m not taking any chances.

    • @bewilderedbrit8928
      @bewilderedbrit8928 Před rokem +2

      Fascinating, even if you are a hypocritical American. I'd eat a Cornish Pasty over "meat loaf" any day of the week.

    • @Flamsterette
      @Flamsterette Před rokem +1

      This is irrelevant.

    • @juliethompson340
      @juliethompson340 Před 11 měsíci

      So, what are you trying to say? How does your comment fit into what is being discussed here.

    • @joyshillaker840
      @joyshillaker840 Před 6 měsíci

      That's not a Cornish pasty. Flakey golden pastry filled with diced beef, potatoes and swede heavy on the black pepper . Savory and tasty.

  • @minecachair
    @minecachair Před rokem +2

    i listened to an audio only version of this last year,completely convinced it was narrated by Clarissa Dickson -Wright of Two Fat Ladies fame.It seems she and A,N.Wilson are sound Doppelgangers.

  • @gayprepperz6862
    @gayprepperz6862 Před měsícem +1

    The more I learn about QV, the more I realize how dis-likable she was as a person. Not a friendly type at all, and she ignored her subjects for decades after Albert died. In fact there was more than a few times when the public began to wonder out loud what they needed her for. She wasn't a sweet and likable mother either. This is perhaps true of many monarchs in their private lives. I don't think of her as their greatest Queen, as she barely involved herself in anything, it's just the length of her rule. The best Queen was QE I, for her political savvy, and QE II for navigating some of the hardest times in UK, and for the duration of her reign. She also kept herself out there for the people almost to the very end.

  • @FigaroHey
    @FigaroHey Před 11 měsíci +4

    So much of this seems rubbish: ask ANY woman who has lost a husband after some 20 years, and if he was a good husband whom she deeply loved, respected and revered, she will not necessarily dissolve into a puddle of self-pity, she will very likely pull up her socks and get busy and do what needs to be done (like be monarch), constantly remembering 'what my husband would advise.' NATURALLY she will become much stronger and more free, not because her husband was a brute or because marriage 'infantilized her,' but because marriage to her true other half completed her, helped her find who she could be, helped her take all the baby steps her mother didn't allow her to take, or society didn't allow her to take. OF COURSE she became much stronger and more self-assured. She HAD to do that, and she had had so much support from Albert over the years that she developed self-confidence without knowing it or needing to exercise it strongly. But without Albert, she HAD to mature, fast, and become a single monarch. It all makes perfect sense without saying that Albert was a bastard the way they make him out here. He was her training wheels. When he died, the wheels came off and she had to ride alone, and she rose to the occasion because she HAD to - like so many widows or indeed, divorced women and single mothers. Not because she necessarily wanted to do everything totally on her own (talk to single mothers, divorced women and widows getting on with life without a partner's support), but because she HAD to. Good on her. Proves she wasn't the tool they make her out to be here, just a woman in a learning process.

    • @blahblahblahblah729
      @blahblahblahblah729 Před 3 měsíci

      And also, if it was up to her, she would have continued to be the widow of windsor. But the people were angry, asking why they were paying for a queen that didn't work for them. She HAD to get to work or there would be a constitutional crisis.

  • @thethrowawaythatstayed7055
    @thethrowawaythatstayed7055 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I cracked up when he imitated Victoria’s mother.

  • @sherryannutto855
    @sherryannutto855 Před rokem

    Who performs the music in this video? It's wonderful 😊

  • @IamMichelle88
    @IamMichelle88 Před rokem +17

    What's interesting is when I was pregnant someone at my job, some guy said I walk like a penguin. When I watched the beginning of this,I could've sworn someone referred to queen Victoria or she wrote down something in her diary regarding this. Regarding being referred to as a penguin or some similarity with 1.

  • @pogcat9445
    @pogcat9445 Před 2 měsíci

    you do a good prince albert voice over keep doing it

  • @cherryrotella3714
    @cherryrotella3714 Před rokem +3

    Just wonderful! Thankyou!

  • @deborahleone4351
    @deborahleone4351 Před měsícem +2

    All the history books and channels will have to be updated now, since Queen Victoria no longer holds the “longest reigning monarch” title. That title now belongs to dear Queen Elizabeth II, when upon her death in 2022, she had reigned 70 years and 214 days.
    Queen Victoria has reigned for 63 years, 7 months and 2 days.
    Queen Elizabeth II’s reign is also the longest ruling female monarch in history! God bless you, Your Majesty......May you enjoy Peace and rest with the Greatest King of all......Jesus Christ. ♥️🙏🕊✝️🙋‍♀️💕💜🕎🌺

  • @dr.barrycohn5461
    @dr.barrycohn5461 Před rokem +13

    We often rewrite our own history and narrative based upon childhood distortions as we all do. Take Meghan and Harry's rewritten of historical facts. Perhaps the idea of wanting to control her, but what childhood distortions become dogma.

    • @bluecollarlit
      @bluecollarlit Před 7 dny

      Every documentary that is not about Harry and Meghan, comment sections are plagued by references to Harry and Meghan, some references sly, others furious, and all marinated in frantic poison.
      You people are obsessed.