Empress Carlota of Mexico & The Habsburg Mexican Empire

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  • čas přidán 29. 04. 2024
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    Charlotte of Belgium was the beautiful and bright only daughter of the first King of Belgium. Her life looked to be joyous too, when she fell in love with a Hapsburg Archduke, Maximilian of Austria. The couple’s numerous royal connections even got them a incredible job opportunity, to become the rulers of the newly established Empire of Mexico. They crossed the Atlantic full of tropical, turquoise dreams of being hailed as heroes. But they quickly discovered that they were philosophically opposed to the small percentage of Mexicans who actually wanted them there. As the Empire crumbled, Carlota made a desperate return to Europe to beg for help. Only to be met with cold rejection, which ensured Maximilian’s demise and drove Carlota to the depths of mental illness. Let’s get to know Empress Carlota of Mexico and The Tragically Short Hapsburg Mexican Empire. Plus the History behind Cinco de Mayo
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @LindsayHoliday
    @LindsayHoliday  Před měsícem +28

    Claim your SPECIAL OFFER for MagellanTV here: sponsr.is/magellantv_lindsayholiday_0424 Start your free trial TODAY so you can watch Empire Builders Mexico www.magellantv.com/series/empire-builders-mexico

    • @danielsantiagourtado3430
      @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před měsícem +3

      You're the Best 😊😊😊😊😊

    • @xiaoxue3541
      @xiaoxue3541 Před měsícem +1

      q

    • @MorningGlory62
      @MorningGlory62 Před měsícem +2

      Thank you, for some variety 👍🏻

    • @charlesferdinand422
      @charlesferdinand422 Před 22 dny +1

      I don't care how much spam MagellanTV tries to shove down my throat or if they sponsor every single video in every channel in YT, I'm still NEVER watching their stupid fucking videos.
      And Raid's Law states that any app/product that spends as much time and money in marketing as Raid: Shadow Legends does is either utter garbage, filled with predatory microtransactions or both.

    • @krono5el
      @krono5el Před 18 dny +1

      So sorry to ask but might you know the name of the painting at 0:42 mark?

  • @PrincessDiana254
    @PrincessDiana254 Před měsícem +1228

    history is so subjective sometimes. hearing “the tragedy of a short lived empire” had my head spin because as a member of a country that was colonized, I see this from a completely different perspective. this is not a shot at this creator because I understand these videos for entertainment.

    • @PrinAnie
      @PrinAnie Před měsícem +53

      Same

    • @tyrson4331
      @tyrson4331 Před měsícem +215

      I agree. Even with the liberal ideas that Maximilian had, and his interest for Mexican people and indigenous, he was an invader backed by the French empire
      Didn’t deserve to get killed though

    • @areiaaphrodite
      @areiaaphrodite Před měsícem +138

      Tbf, at least Maximillian had the awareness and empathy to ask that a stipulation be that the people actually vote him in to show that they wanted him there; not just show up and demand they fall in line. It's not his fault that the vote was staged.

    • @luisabolado
      @luisabolado Před měsícem +122

      although i agree, as a mexican, i think it was a tragedy for her and her husband specifically, not the empire as such, since that was made by the conservatives and awful napoleon III, and carlota and maximiliano didnt even have the same ideals as them, they were quite liberal

    • @thenoblepoptart
      @thenoblepoptart Před měsícem +154

      i think “tragedy” in this instance refers to the death of the people involved at the end of the story, as in a greek tragedy or shakespearean tragedy, rather than it being considered a bad outcome that mexico isn’t habsburg controlled

  • @sebastianescalante5618
    @sebastianescalante5618 Před měsícem +657

    Mexican Here, while I have mixed opinions on the Franco-Austrian backed empire they sent our way. There's no denying Maximilian actually did care about México, in fact, many people do agree that had he lived, the many civil wars could have been at least partially avoided. Still, he was an invader from Austria backed by the French, and the French weren't exactly well regarded here.
    He did NOT deserve to die though, everyone agrees there.

    • @ladylunaginaofgames40
      @ladylunaginaofgames40 Před měsícem +37

      Yeah, he was open minded enough that he seemed ideal, but of course they executed him all the same

    • @blackbirdmd9189
      @blackbirdmd9189 Před měsícem +66

      ⁠@@ladylunaginaofgames40I know it sounds very unfair. But there’s still so much context about the political situation of Mexico at the time. Social disparity was wild, and Mexicans were basically treated as slaves. Of course the good intentions that he had regarding the Mexican empire practically flew under the radar. They represented the “European oppressors” that they got rid of during the independence a few years before. I can’t help but wonder though, how different my country would have been as an empire. 😂

    • @sebastianescalante5618
      @sebastianescalante5618 Před měsícem +15

      @@blackbirdmd9189 I often do as well, but sadly we cannot exactly find out.

    • @brucealanwilson4121
      @brucealanwilson4121 Před měsícem

      The execution was probably politically necessary, but the mutalation of the corpse unforgivable. Particularly as both Maximillian & Juarez were Fremasons.

    • @DDW510
      @DDW510 Před měsícem +12

      Our ancestors didn't want these people ruling them, and now there is a democracy in Mexico. However Carlota Loca is an excellent Halloween costume and what would the US do without Cinco de Mayo?

  • @charliemagnebautista2902
    @charliemagnebautista2902 Před měsícem +708

    Love how you're one of the remaining history CZcamsrs who doesn't use those awful AI thumbnails

    • @luisabolado
      @luisabolado Před měsícem +64

      omg this tho… i hate ai 😭😭

    • @ahmedzahir2865
      @ahmedzahir2865 Před měsícem +59

      Please don't use AI lindsay

    • @Neddoest
      @Neddoest Před měsícem +51

      Or an awful AI voice!

    • @sanrio..luvsss
      @sanrio..luvsss Před měsícem +7

      exactlyyy some of them be oversexualizing them too much

    • @ivysn13
      @ivysn13 Před měsícem +7

      i agree ! i love hearing her voice narrating it, and why ai will never replace us there’s such a humanizing aspect to hear hers

  • @cmrsnowflake
    @cmrsnowflake Před měsícem +315

    "She's very intelligent, which is a bit annoying, but I suppose I'll get over it."
    You sir, are the worst

    • @No_jews_allowed
      @No_jews_allowed Před 14 dny

      Don’t get your panties in a bunch you “empowered” feminist

    • @juangaribo1609
      @juangaribo1609 Před 12 dny +1

      Very typical of those days if anything he’s actually nice compare to many of his time.

  • @sofiagirscher
    @sofiagirscher Před měsícem +274

    As a mexican girl, I dare to say most of us think highly of Maximilian and Carlota, they truly loved Mexico and we often talk about how Mexico´s future would've looked like if Maximilian had stayed as emperor. We understand how mexicans could've felt at the time due to all the foreign invasions and after being just freed from Spain but he did not deserve to die. If you visit his crypt in Vienna, you can see all the mexican flags and gifts mexicans have brought him. They both deserved so much better.

    • @anthonymejia1769
      @anthonymejia1769 Před měsícem +21

      No

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +31

      Thank you for that. People who are ignorant and don’t know the full story pass judgment very quickly. It’s a shame that the empire’s legacy continuously faces insult to injury. My Mexican grandparents had small portraits of their majesties in their house, they are regarded highly by many.

    • @yung1717
      @yung1717 Před měsícem +5

      Oh that’s … interesting

    • @pxndx7516
      @pxndx7516 Před měsícem

      Non-Mexicans reading this, please do not think these pro-monarchy comments are representative of the population as a whole. This sentiment is very new and comes from this recent phenomenon of right wing, anti-Juarez revisionist history where "we would be so much better if these foreign monarchs stayed and we never became a secular, democratic country".

    • @pxndx7516
      @pxndx7516 Před měsícem +27

      @@Duquedecastro He could've been the nicest sweetest most Mexico loving man to ever live. He was still an emperor.
      By your username and profile picture it's clear people aren't ignorant--you're just biased in favor of monarchs.

  • @tonyjesus1657
    @tonyjesus1657 Před měsícem +293

    Many Mexicans nowadays see Max and Carlota more as tragic figures than enemies. Yes, they were imposed by foreigners, but they were deceived into believing most Mexicans wanted them, and they truly did love Mexico and wished to see it grow. Many of the schools and institutions they founded are still around, and they supported indigenous rights in a way no government has since. Had they remained in power, it is very likely Mexico would be a more developed nation, as the Juarez govt and the dictatorship that followed room us down the line of misery and rebellion. They attempted to outlaw debt peonage, and did what they could to redistribute land, two of the main demands of the later Mexican revolution. For better or for worse, they did their best.

    • @mouthwaterin
      @mouthwaterin Před měsícem +33

      I would take Maximilian and Carlota over most presidents

    • @thorpeaaron1110
      @thorpeaaron1110 Před měsícem +13

      ​@@mouthwaterinSame.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +21

      And in reality, everyone misses the fact that they were not really “imposed” by foreigners. The plan for a reinstatement of monarchy in Mexico was a Mexican plan, brought to the attention of the French empress by Mexicans in France. (Empress Eugènie, by the way, was a descendant of Moctezuma II). The plan was **helped** by “foreigners”, and the Mexican Imperial Army was aided by the French one. Also, Maximilian was chosen for the very fact that his ancestors once ruled Mexico at its inception. His ancestor Charles V / Carlos I granted Mexico City its arms that it still bears in the 16th century!

    • @moomoopo
      @moomoopo Před 26 dny +6

      The comments on here are sick

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před 26 dny +12

      @@moomoopo That’s because you have no clue about real Mexican history, you only know the version according to Juarez and his owners.

  • @jamellfoster6029
    @jamellfoster6029 Před měsícem +177

    He shouldn't have been chasing tail when he had a beautiful, intelligent, devoted young wife. Granted Maximilian crushed big time on his cousin/sister in law, Sisi. He didn't have to treat Charlotte the way he did. Queen Victoria was trying to protect her young cousin.

    • @calico_queen8976
      @calico_queen8976 Před měsícem +27

      Yeah, can you imagine how Leopold and Victoria must've felt when they hunch about Maximilian not being a good husband for Charlotte was right.

  • @Bitterblue55
    @Bitterblue55 Před měsícem +154

    It sounds like Carlotta and her husband were pawns in Europe’s game of colonization. Their story is one of personal tragedy for two people who were ready to deeply care for Mexico and its people. But, you can’t blame the Mexican people for hating foreigners that labeled themselves as their rulers. It’s one of those situations that shows history isn’t made of “good guys and bad guys.”

    • @LindsayHoliday
      @LindsayHoliday  Před měsícem +11

      Exactly!

    • @HideYourKarmaChameleon
      @HideYourKarmaChameleon Před měsícem +7

      Funny enough, I kinda feel that way about tech giants. A modern form of colonization of various industries. Are their empires and riches not as vast?

    • @lucario2188
      @lucario2188 Před měsícem

      How it was colonization? The idea wasn't Napoleon III idea it was a Idea of Mexican Conservatives who conviced his wife who then conviced her husband, before this attempte they had tried to Crown Agustin son Emperor. Heck they even tried to get a relative of the British Royal Family to get on the Throne, because Conservatives during this time in Mexico history were anti United State and to counter the power of the USA they searched for another power who could.
      France was also not planning to stay long term. We know this because of documents from the French goverment. They wanted to put all of Mexico under the Mexican Empire control, have Mexico pay it's debt and get out, they didn't even wanted to get preferential conditions for trade or contro of the industries.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +10

      And in reality, everyone misses the fact that they were not really “imposed” by foreigners. The plan for a reinstatement of monarchy in Mexico was a Mexican plan, brought to the attention of the French empress by Mexicans in France. (Empress Eugènie, by the way, was a descendant of Moctezuma II). These plans had been discussed since Mexican independence, as Mexico was used to being under monarchical rule and wasn’t very good at republican rule. The plan was **helped** by “foreigners”, and the Mexican Imperial Army was aided by the French one. Also, Maximilian was chosen for the very fact that his ancestors once ruled Mexico at its inception. His ancestor Charles V / Carlos I granted Mexico City its arms that it still bears in the 16th century!

    • @jonatikaWwe
      @jonatikaWwe Před měsícem +2

      @@DuquedecastroWOW fascinating! Those things are truly unheard of 🤯

  • @jmmin1213
    @jmmin1213 Před měsícem +188

    Her niece, Stephanie had an almost similar fate. Her parents marriage was disastrous and she married Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria. Rudolf was unfaithful and infected her with disease that made her infertile. And everything went downhill from there. At this point, we can say that the Austrian Hapsburg was a total mess

    • @timallardyce1216
      @timallardyce1216 Před měsícem +17

      & Stephanie's sister Louise who was locked away for years, though unlike her aunt, she didn't have mental illness, just an awful husband that wouldn't divorce her

    • @cheyenneysewijn7343
      @cheyenneysewijn7343 Před měsícem +6

      Fun fact, Rudolf was also Maximiliams nephew. So Charlotte's niece and Maximilian's nephew wes eachother:)

    • @alicianelson1252
      @alicianelson1252 Před 21 dnem +4

      @@cheyenneysewijn7343 the royal family tree is more like a web

  • @lx_azzl
    @lx_azzl Před 24 dny +42

    Empress Charlotte left an everlasting legacy in Mexico. My great-great-grandaunt Josefa Varela was her damsel and herself a much respected socialité in liberal Mexico. And there is even a dessert very popular in this country honouring the empress' name: Carlota, made from cookies, condensed milk and lemon.

    • @angelbelmont2190
      @angelbelmont2190 Před 20 dny

      Thiv3s

    • @borisstanislav4560
      @borisstanislav4560 Před 13 dny

      You can see in the comments that there are many many mexicans ready to sell the country to foreigners and would be happy to be their puppets ("damsels"). Fortunately that time it had a happy ending at Cerro de las campanas.

  • @nope9451
    @nope9451 Před měsícem +55

    For those who are into historical fiction, legendary Mexican author Carlos Fuentes has a magical realist novel, Aura, that deals with Carlota and Maximilian. It’s absolutely fascinating!

    • @SBSF04
      @SBSF04 Před měsícem +3

      Thanks for the recommendation. I’ve been meaning to read something by Carlos Fuentes

    • @nope9451
      @nope9451 Před měsícem

      @@SBSF04 You’re welcome!

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +5

      As does C.M. Mayo, The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire. Unfortunately both of the books we mentioned have republican slants

  • @darianasosa7298
    @darianasosa7298 Před měsícem +23

    As a Mexican, I'd never seen actual photographs of either Maximilian or Carlota before this video. Only their official portraits. I've had the opportunity of seeing those in real life. It was interesting to see that Maximilian was a really awful husband since before becoming emperor. There's a myth here that blond kids born in small towns are descendants of Maximilian, their ancestors born from his many infidelities. You forgot to mention they also refurbished Chapultepec Castle and you can still see their furniture, adjustments, carriages, clothes, decorations and portraits there.

    • @ejvaldes
      @ejvaldes Před 24 dny

      Yo tenía una opinión muy favorable de Maximiliano hasta que comencé a estudiar el periodo a profundidad. Hoy pienso que él, como Emperador, estaba condenado al fracaso, y que hubiese sido mejor que él se lo pasara viajando y cazando mariposas y que Carlota fuera la gobernante de facto.

  • @areiaaphrodite
    @areiaaphrodite Před měsícem +59

    I always knew Empress Carlotta had a rather tragic life but it was still hard listening to this. She tried so hard to mske the best of her marriage and her life and didn't really deserve any of what happened to her.

  • @Replicaate
    @Replicaate Před měsícem +26

    Carlota and Max basically got played by everyone - the Austrians, the French, the various factions of Mexican politics. They weren't exactly innocents, we are talking 19th century imperial adventures and all that entaiils here, but they didn't deserve the ends they met with...

  • @juliamartinshistory
    @juliamartinshistory Před měsícem +110

    Carlota’s tale is both fascinating and a bit heartbreaking. It’s amazing how history is full of these epic stories of ambition and downfall. Makes you appreciate the quieter moments in life!

  • @Caligirl4life555
    @Caligirl4life555 Před 26 dny +13

    As a Mexican American, I’m so glad you covered this story! I’ve never visited Mexico City, only Guanajuato where my parents are from. I’m hoping someday to visit the city so that see first hand El Castillo de Chapultepec. Also, would definitely love to visit Vienna!

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před měsícem +84

    Saw the title and was instantly hooked. You're the Queen of narration lindsay! Could hear you for hours on end and NEVER get tired❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @cynhiacations9879
    @cynhiacations9879 Před měsícem +83

    I wonder if Carlota's mental state was a symptom of syphilis as her husband had acquired a sexual disease😊

    • @yellowiris123
      @yellowiris123 Před měsícem +2

      Either that or something like bipolar

    • @Edmonton-of2ec
      @Edmonton-of2ec Před měsícem +28

      Or yah know… the trauma of having to flee across an ocean, begging for help and being rejected at every turn and then learning of the violent death of her spouse. That… may have had a negative impact on her mental state

    • @blahblahblahblah729
      @blahblahblahblah729 Před měsícem +5

      That's extremely unlikely, it takes decades for syphilis to evolve into neurosyphilis. Sometimes more than 20 years. Syphilis is a slow developing disease.

    • @nuotatorre8741
      @nuotatorre8741 Před měsícem

      ​@@blahblahblahblah729Stress lowers the immune system, and Maximilian could have been ill long before their voyage to Brasil

    • @arsangelica6858
      @arsangelica6858 Před měsícem +3

      That thing about the midwife with the mushrooms was interesting, if it could actually cause that much destruction over time. I’ll have to look that up.

  • @realtawandrew
    @realtawandrew Před 20 dny +5

    This is a historic movie I would gladly watch. It has everything. US civil war, cinco de mayo, leopold and his Congo atrocities, queen Victoria. Great documentary🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆

    • @mdc3148
      @mdc3148 Před 10 dny +1

      Yes!! Unsure why it’s hasn’t been re-made recently! There are many older versions

  • @MiyuMotou
    @MiyuMotou Před měsícem +33

    I'm always avoiding Maximillian & Carlota's story because in the end it's sad.
    I'm in love with Chapultepec castle, I haven't finished the video but I hope you've seen it or one day get to.
    I'm mexican btw

    • @adriannespring8598
      @adriannespring8598 Před měsícem +2

      "60 Years of Solitude" is interesting. By Gustavo Vazquez-Lozano.

  • @blackbirdmd9189
    @blackbirdmd9189 Před měsícem +68

    There’s this book about Carlota’s late life after the death of Maximillian. It’s called News from the Empire by author Fernando del Paso. If anybody wants some more information about her late years dealing with mental illness

    • @adriannespring8598
      @adriannespring8598 Před měsícem +7

      "60 Years in Solitude" is pretty powerful. By Gustavo Vazquez-Lozano.

    • @blackbirdmd9189
      @blackbirdmd9189 Před měsícem

      @@adriannespring8598 I haven’t read that one. I’ll look it up. Thanks ☺️

    • @herethereandeverywhere02
      @herethereandeverywhere02 Před měsícem +3

      My favourite book in the world. Although it is a historic novel, hence Fernando del Paso (the author) takes some narrative liberties to make the narration more enthralling, it is without a doubt a masterpiece.

    • @goomu
      @goomu Před měsícem

      Yes but take into account that is a novel thus no entirely historically accurate

    • @jonatikaWwe
      @jonatikaWwe Před měsícem

      That’s fiction lol

  • @fizzy_buzz
    @fizzy_buzz Před měsícem +15

    My jaw dropped every time I heard another famous historical figure mentioned. It was like a crossover and I was unaware that Empress Sisi, Queen Victoria and the French Monarchy were related to Charlotte!

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +3

      Yes! The Mexican empress was daughter, granddaughter, sister, sister in-law, cousin and wife of reigning or deposed sovereigns throughout Europe (and Mexico)! Very well connected.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +4

      The world really is very small (at least in countries with shared history), and as a Mexican, I can trace my lines to some of Carlota’s ancestors. And it’s very interesting to me that even Empress Eugènie of France (Carlota’s contemporary also) is my cousin through two different lines; one is through the Aztec emperor Moctezuma II whom we are both descendants of!

    • @fizzy_buzz
      @fizzy_buzz Před měsícem +1

      @@Duquedecastro Woahhh! That's so cool! You have an awesome heritage and are very fortunate to know a part of your ancestors :D

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +2

      @@fizzy_buzz Thank you! Yes my grandparents were sure to pass on their heritage to us all. It’s fun to discover even more than they knew! And was even funner to share it with them, my grandmother just passed in the last couple months at almost 101

  • @hotcheetopapi245
    @hotcheetopapi245 Před měsícem +12

    My family is from Mexico originally, and my dad would love to give Mexican history lessons, and it's crazy how long ago these stories felt but she died in 1927, my great-grandma, who is still alive, would have been around 2-3 years old

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +1

      Exactly my sentiment! I’m in my 30’s and my grandmother was about 5 years old when the Mexican empress passed away. She always tells me little tidbits about our family during the era that she heard growing up and is 101 years old!

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před měsícem +24

    EARLY! Always ready to drink tea thanks to you Lindsay! Perfect drink for your videos! You're a treasure! Much better than ANY AI documentaries out there. Love from Colombia! This is special for me as a LATAM resident! 🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴

  • @tyrson4331
    @tyrson4331 Před měsícem +44

    About Agustín de Iturbide, he actually was killed 2 years after been deposed. He had a good deal when deposed, even a pension, as long as he didn’t returned to Mexico. When he did, he was executed

    • @lucario2188
      @lucario2188 Před měsícem +5

      He was never given the Pension, they acepted giving it on paper, but never gave it. They also didn't said they were going to kill him until he was already in Europe. He went out of Mexico due to his own initiave, because he saw the Instability that was being cause by two political camps that saw him has a obstacle for their respectives political projects.
      The bourbonist who wanted to go back to how it was before independece and the Republicans who wanted to created a Republic and the 2 saw him has a obstacle.
      So he though if i go the problem end. The rebels had even given their word to gain more support that they weren't going to harm him. It was he who decided to call the congress again abdicate even though he still could have resisted military, he had signed a treaty with the Comanche Nation in 1822 and they had send him a letter in which they were willing to send soldiers to help him suppress the rebels. And the Empire still had armies in which he could depend, but seeing how he achived independece with little blooshed he was unwilling to cause blooshed now. He always took pride in how little blooshed he spilled to get the Mexican independece.
      He was also stalked by Mexican spies until he moved to the UK. When he got the UK he started reciving letters from Mexican telling him of all the turmoil and inciting him to go back, before going back he had a reunion with Jose de San Martin who tried to dissuade him againts going back.
      Before going back Agustin send a Letter to the Congress anouncing that he was coming back. He wasn't aware that there was a law that ordered him to be killed if he went back. The law was also not ment to be applied, it was a law that congress created to dissuade him from coming back. He was that popular that Congress feared his popularity. Heck the Congress of the State where he was detained when he came back prohibited him from talking to a judge or to talk to the local congress to evitate the word to be spread that he was arrested, instead they held a secret reunion where they ordered his execution, before the population got the wind that he was there. They feared a popular uprising.

  • @mikkim11
    @mikkim11 Před měsícem +37

    Been waiting for ages for this video, thank you so much. I always found Charlotte a more intelligent and interesting character than her sister-in-law Sissi, but nevertheless she was overshadowed by her beauty

    • @luisabolado
      @luisabolado Před měsícem +3

      yes! carlota was is such an interesting and multifaceted character

    • @starlite04
      @starlite04 Před měsícem +2

      I think Charlotte has a more graceful beauty.

    • @SomePerson_Online
      @SomePerson_Online Před měsícem

      and then she married a Hapsburg

  • @charliemagnebautista2902
    @charliemagnebautista2902 Před měsícem +22

    I hope you make a video about the 3 wives of the last Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi

  • @marianacamacho7026
    @marianacamacho7026 Před měsícem +6

    Yaay! I'm Mexican and I've been following this channel for a while, so it's exciting to see you cover this topic 😁

  • @luisabolado
    @luisabolado Před měsícem +12

    omg this is the best ever!! im so glad now you have a video on her, i love your videos and her, she’s my all-time favourite icon since i was a little girl, i even went to a restricted part of the castle where she had (still is there!) a bench where she sat and looked at the city from afar… she was amazing❤

  • @Romaboo680
    @Romaboo680 Před měsícem +10

    Maximilian showing up in Vera Cruz like: "How do you do fellow Mexicans?"

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +6

      And he was. His ancestors were connected to Mexico since the 16th century

    • @leonardopadilla7631
      @leonardopadilla7631 Před měsícem +3

      The sub 5 Mexican -Americans they’re feel more American

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před 29 dny +2

      @@leonardopadilla7631 What does that mean?

    • @ks8084
      @ks8084 Před 7 dny

      Lol

  • @helloxo666
    @helloxo666 Před měsícem +5

    I’ve painted Carlotta (I’m Mexican American) and am happy that the king surrendered himself to die in Mexico. I wish Carlotta had stayed in Mexico too. She would be better remembered for it.

  • @MNcoquicoqui
    @MNcoquicoqui Před měsícem +5

    Maximilian was a fan of Mariachi music. He asked for the Mariachi band to play before he was executed.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +2

      He also created the black “traje de mariachi”, or suit that mariachis still wear to this day!

  • @AlexVanChezlaw
    @AlexVanChezlaw Před 12 dny +3

    Oh Maximiliano, life was unfair to you, even with all your faults, you were still one of the best rulers this country ever had. Maybe in another reality you led Mexico to greatness....

  • @magellantv
    @magellantv Před měsícem +8

    This was amazing! Thank you so much for such incredible content 👏

  • @esta8651
    @esta8651 Před měsícem +59

    The lesson I get from History Tea Time is that monarchies and empires aren’t good for anyone involved.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +5

      That’s all propaganda

    • @ejvaldes
      @ejvaldes Před 24 dny +2

      Most european countries labeled as "welfare states" are either constitutional or parliamentary monarchies.

  • @anweshabiswas4813
    @anweshabiswas4813 Před měsícem +10

    Big fan of Lindsay , your videos give me an lifelong obsession for the history of European and other royal families ❤❤❤❤

  • @lipingrahman6648
    @lipingrahman6648 Před měsícem +8

    Well Mexico was once part of the Habsburg dominion until 1700. Why not one more Habsburg just for old times sake.

  • @janeyrevanescence12
    @janeyrevanescence12 Před měsícem +17

    Man, the last time I was this early, the Aztecs were still ruling Mexico!
    I feel sorry for Carlotta, both as someone who lost their fiancé and as someone who suffers from mental illness.

  • @Duquedecastro
    @Duquedecastro Před 26 dny +4

    More interesting facts: The Mexican conservatives and monarchists **invited** Maximilian to become the Emperor of Mexico. He was elected by the Assembly of Notables in Mexico City. The empire’s regents included the son of Jose Maria Morelos - and literally one of the nationally celebrated “niños heroes” of Chapultepec was his right hand general - Miramón who died **with** him and Tomás Mejia - and Indigenous general under Maximilian! No one seems to bother reading real history!!

  • @Kaboomboo
    @Kaboomboo Před měsícem +9

    She could've married the first guy. He was dang cute. Max was ooglay.

    • @AstarionWifey
      @AstarionWifey Před měsícem +2

      Right?! Who cares about the responsibilities gf
      Get that crown 👑 😭👏

    • @princess-mn2li
      @princess-mn2li Před měsícem +1

      I was thinking the same! Lol

  • @herethereandeverywhere02
    @herethereandeverywhere02 Před měsícem +24

    Hi Lindsay, 3 years-subscriber Mexican history geek here. I cannot fully express how thankful I am now that you've made this homage to the only female ruler Mexico has had. Its been 3 years since I've been asking and waiting for you to make this video.
    Carlota is as tragic as enigmatic, a true woman of her times entangled by the vicissitudes of that exactly, her times. Born to rule, she had the misfortune of docking in this stubborn, beautiful, ungrateful, sometimes obnoxious piece of land called Mexico. Had the circumstances been different, I'm sure she herself could've become and ended as the ruler 19th century Mexico long needed, a peace bringer, change maker. Rest in peace, Mamá Carlota, and rest in the hearts of all of us mexicans who know that you gave it all for this your new homeland, land that offers no payoff but disdain.
    Thank you Lindsay.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +5

      Exactly. What a beautiful shot at prosperity and stability Mexico had with them. Unfortunately, once again, being so close the USA, no neighbor can “shine brighter” if you know what I mean.

    • @jonatikaWwe
      @jonatikaWwe Před měsícem +2

      Never thought about it like that, it’s true!

  • @LostInSpace175
    @LostInSpace175 Před dnem +2

    what a fascinating story! I feel terrible for carlota!

  • @blahblahblahblah729
    @blahblahblahblah729 Před měsícem +16

    PLEASEEEE do a video on Maria Leopoldina, first empress of Brazil! And her son Dom Pedro II, and his daughter Princess Isabel! I'd love to see a video on the brazilian royal family. Especially Empress Leopoldina, that is still loved and respected in Brazil.

  • @user-oj7bn5fq4m
    @user-oj7bn5fq4m Před měsícem +43

    As a Hispanic it is important to mention that Carlota and Max would’ve been A LOT better than what come afterwards. It’s to my understanding they were incredibly liberal for their time, Max truly loved Mexico and they immersed themselves into the indigenous cultures there. A far cry from the English monarchs who thought of themselves as French first. Only problem were Max and Carlotta were foreign. A monarchy wouldn’t have worked in the long run, but I wonder how Mexico would’ve been under their reign. It makes me wonder if the Mexican Revolution would’ve happened. It kinda reminds me of Jacobo Arbenz and Guatemala.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +8

      The ironic thing that no one seems to realize is that once upon a time in history, many Mexican’s own ancestors were “foreign” to Mexico. Many of our ancestors came from the same place: Europe. In actuality, our Mexican ancestors were Novohispanos (New Spain) and Spaniards (Old Spain) who were subjects of the exact same Habsburg dynasty!! That is why they chose Maximilian as Mexican emperor in the first place! His own ancestor Carlos I granted Mexico City its shield of arms in the 16th century - which it still uses today!

    • @mett978
      @mett978 Před měsícem

      It probably would have ended up like every other Francophone African country - stolen resources still tied to the French GDP up until today - unless of course Maximilian gained enough popularity to sever ties with the French and truly, genuinely served the people of Mexico

    • @mercianthane2503
      @mercianthane2503 Před měsícem +5

      At this poing México was still a infant nation. Literally every citizen had already both european and native ancestry.
      I think that, at the end, Max and Carlota's dynasty would have been mexicanized quickly, in one or two generations, no longer seen as foreigners but actual mexicans.
      The revolution was caused mostly by Porfirio Díaz 30 years of absolute presidency.

    • @alexisschiffer4830
      @alexisschiffer4830 Před měsícem +3

      @@DuquedecastroBut by the 1860s Mexico was 40 years independent. Doesn’t matter if Mexicans have Spanish or other European ancestry. Maximilian and Charlotte were still foreigners and AFAIK, the plan was only supported by some elite. Look at the Philippines (another former Spanish colony). Many Filipinos have Chinese, Spanish or other non-native ancestry. That doesn’t mean they want to become a puppet state of China, no more than many Mexicans at the time not wanting to be a proposed French puppet state ruled by an Austrian archduke.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +5

      @@alexisschiffer4830 First of all, Filipinos do not have Spanish ancestry, only 1 to 3% do. Not sure even why bring them up. Mexico wasn’t in any way similar to the situation in the Philippines. Mexico is a country with 80-90% of its people descending from Europe in one way or another and in any amount. Second, 40 years independent is nothing. Third, the Mexicans ***themselves*** came up with the plan for the First Mexican Empire **and** the Second Mexican Empire. Monarchy was all that Mexico had ever known, until 1823 after the demise of the Spanish and First Mexican Empires. Fourthly, Maximilian was a descendant of the kings that ruled Mexico since the 16th century, and that granted Mexico City it’s coat of arms that it still bears to this day - that’s not foreign no matter how you splice it, 40 years or not.

  • @damonika09
    @damonika09 Před měsícem +6

    Damn. A tragic empress just like her namesake was a tragic princess.

  • @Elsa.8511
    @Elsa.8511 Před měsícem +3

    As a mexican female gracias 🙏🏻 for this video I've always been a great fan! I wish you'd do more mexico related videos once in a while.. maybe Pio Pico last governor under mexican rule.. my husband works with his close descendants

  • @AleGovea1987
    @AleGovea1987 Před měsícem +23

    I live in the city where Maximiliano was executed: Querétaro. As a child I got very sad when visiting the exact place of the execution: "El Cerro de las Campanas" just for the simple fact that afterwards Carlotta, so pretty, had become mentally unstable. I saw her as a princess whose prince had been killed.😢

  • @sosomumu
    @sosomumu Před měsícem +9

    please do a video on her brother leopold and his heinous crimes in the congo!!

  • @Edmonton-of2ec
    @Edmonton-of2ec Před měsícem +5

    15:58 They actually weren’t crowned. Given the situation the country was in, it was decided to hold off on any official ceremony until the country had been stabilized… which never happened. Ever. This is Mexico we’re talking about

  • @PerfectlyImperfect93
    @PerfectlyImperfect93 Před měsícem +7

    Thank you for doing these Lindsay!❤

  • @Richardsonprincess00
    @Richardsonprincess00 Před měsícem +5

    Hopefully do the video of the bloodline linguine of the Belgium royal family soon.
    Felt sorry for Charlotte's miserable life and that she was madness of crazy.

  • @dragondotell701
    @dragondotell701 Před měsícem +3

    Great video, and I can't wait to see what comes out next!

  • @Amanda.Villarreal
    @Amanda.Villarreal Před měsícem +7

    I've been watching you for a while and have never been this early to one of your videos! Thank you for doing what you do!👸❤🎉🤴

  • @AnaFitzgerald1996
    @AnaFitzgerald1996 Před měsícem +4

    I HAVE LOVED THIS VIDEO VERY MUCH! THANKS FOR YOUR WORK!

  • @kaliwindx7287
    @kaliwindx7287 Před měsícem +1

    This was an excellent video. I really appreciate this. I knew a little bit about Carlotta, but this was very informative due to the excellent research. Thank you.

  • @hailchristandmary
    @hailchristandmary Před měsícem +7

    Really loved this episode about Mexican history thank you.

  • @mett978
    @mett978 Před měsícem +6

    Funny how we're all connected... If she and her Prince had been supported and successful, her brother Leopold probably wouldn't have gotten hold of her money and committed the genocide in the Congo

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +2

      This is true. In my opinion, the 12% Indigenous of Mexico would also have faired much better. It is true, as the creator of the video said, that the Mexican empire was tragically short. But people who can’t handle the truth cried and complained, so she changed it.

  • @LJlnn
    @LJlnn Před měsícem +1

    LOVE it when you just talk about one person in detail!

  • @joshuamichael2421
    @joshuamichael2421 Před měsícem +1

    Ive been hoping for this one for a long time! Loved it

  • @jamesonporritt2197
    @jamesonporritt2197 Před měsícem +6

    Always makes my day better!!

  • @jacobdenis9192
    @jacobdenis9192 Před měsícem +8

    Love your videos ❤
    How is the history tour going 😊

  • @heycheno9310
    @heycheno9310 Před 21 dnem +2

    She deserved so much better. She had love for the country and was eager to make people’s lives better… that’s much more than other Mexican contemporary leaders have.

  • @jeepz669
    @jeepz669 Před 9 dny +1

    They made that poor woman go nuts, she deserved better

  • @adelaromero2538
    @adelaromero2538 Před měsícem +5

    About time!!!

  • @andreabarrios5249
    @andreabarrios5249 Před měsícem +3

    If I may add some corrections, starting @ 9:50: The Mayan pyramids in the photo are in Guatemala, there are other Mayan cities in Mexico 😉
    The conquistador Hernán Cortez arrived in Mexico from Spain in 1519, but only conquered the Aztec Empire in 1521, which lead to the establishment of the New Spain colony, lasting 300 years. The War of Independence started in 1810, but independence was granted by Spain only in 1821. However, we don't call it a “revolution,” because the Mexican Revolution was fought in 1910 against Porfirio Diaz's dictatorship. In fact, a Republic with President Guadalupe Victoria was indeed established, because the independence was an anti-monarchist movement, just as in the USA and other former Spanish colonies in Latin America. However, it is true that this lead to political instability, and the elites did not want to lose their power and influence, so they later established the First Mexican Empire with Iturbide. As others have pointed out, Maximiliano and Carlota's Empire was not colonization per se, because as shown, they were invited and convinced by the Mexican elites who wanted a return to conservatism. Indeed, the problems arose when monarchy supporters realized that Maximilian, and Carlota, as also mentioned in the video, were more liberal than they were. That is why monarchists did not oppose to Maximiliano being assassinated in the end… Our history books portrayed the Europeans as invaders and the Mexican Republic as the heroes, but as we know, story is never black or white. Thank you for helping us learn the nuances! 😊

  • @alien8897
    @alien8897 Před měsícem +1

    YEEEEEEESS I've waited so long for this day, thank you Lindsay 💖

  • @LVBadflower
    @LVBadflower Před 20 dny +2

    I grew up hearing about the fate of Maximillian’s horses. A lot of places in Mexico claim to be the hiding spot where the horses were sent to

  • @Elisabeth_Draws
    @Elisabeth_Draws Před měsícem +5

    I love History better because of you! ❤

  • @starlite04
    @starlite04 Před měsícem +7

    My heart breaks for Charlotte.

  • @martijnkeisers5900
    @martijnkeisers5900 Před měsícem +1

    Excellent video!

  • @Eduard016
    @Eduard016 Před měsícem

    Thank you for an interesting video.

  • @tylishaqueenoceanriver1676
    @tylishaqueenoceanriver1676 Před měsícem +8

    Can I consider you my teacher? I learn a lot more from you than my school

  • @dylangarcia3898
    @dylangarcia3898 Před měsícem +6

    I feel like carlota along with dowgner empress Dagmar are the most tragic of royal ladies

    • @ChibiProwl
      @ChibiProwl Před měsícem +1

      Yes.😢 Carlotta went mad, and dowager empress Dagmar lost her first husband to tuberculosis, I believe, then lost her children and grandchildren to a VERY bloody revolution.😢

  • @StamperWendy
    @StamperWendy Před měsícem

    Thank you

  • @MaryamofShomal
    @MaryamofShomal Před 12 dny +1

    What a life! What a video 🫶🏽

  • @timallardyce1216
    @timallardyce1216 Před měsícem +3

    What a tragic story. Most of her life spent locked away.

  • @sgillespie964
    @sgillespie964 Před měsícem +3

    Oooo, I love this subject

  • @jojoone1099
    @jojoone1099 Před měsícem +1

    Another hit!

  • @amindforall442
    @amindforall442 Před 21 dnem

    Awesome video 👏👏👏

  • @hannahrozenberg3411
    @hannahrozenberg3411 Před měsícem +3

    Amazing video Lindsay! Would you be interested in making a video about La Malinche, she was a translator and lover of Hernan Cortez.

  • @Duquedecastro
    @Duquedecastro Před 28 dny +3

    The empire brought stability and a “referee” of sorts. The Indigenous, as well as the average Mexican, all benefited from their rule. Child labor was abolished. The poorest had some of their debt cancelled so as not be virtual serfs. Institutions were created to preserve Indigenous languages and culture. People have no clue. They see the word “European” and run off like a chicken with no head. Much of Mexico has roots from Europe anyway, and Maximilian’s own ancestors were in charge of Mexico as the Kingdom of Nueva España. His ancestor Charles V / Carlos I granted Mexico City its shield of arms in the 16th century. A huge amount of our Mexican culture is because of our European ancestors and old monarchs whether people acknowledge it or not.

  • @Ms-jf1ux
    @Ms-jf1ux Před 17 dny +1

    Mamá Carlota 🥺

  • @CogitoErgoSumFortis
    @CogitoErgoSumFortis Před 13 dny +2

    The country didn't "tour" the body of Maximilian. The Austrian empire hadn't filed the necessary paperwork to claim the body (not kidding, look it up)

  • @ahmedelshafey7602
    @ahmedelshafey7602 Před 29 dny +3

    Poor lady

  • @Duquedecastro
    @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +4

    17:00 I do not think honestly we can say the country of Mexico at that time was majority “liberal”! Conservatives were supported by many, and many from the liberal party slowly came into the imperial cause

  • @conho4898
    @conho4898 Před měsícem

    Hey Lindsay! Love your videos! I think it would be great if you can make subtitles for your videos, it would be amazing!

  • @Duquedecastro
    @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +16

    In reality the Second Mexican Empire was not a colonization by the French. As a Mexican, I know it was a mutual cooperation amongst Mexican monarchists and conservatives with the Second French Empire. This was a project put into action by Mexicans themselves, and the Imperial Mexican Army fought alongside the French one, for instance, at the Battle of Puebla. History according to “some” now call it a “French vs Mexican” thing. That is not correct.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před 26 dny +4

      More interesting facts: The Mexican conservatives and monarchists **invited** Maximilian to become the Emperor of Mexico. He was elected by the Assembly of Notables in Mexico City. The empire’s regents included the son of Jose Maria Morelos - and literally one of the nationally celebrated “niños heroes” of Chapultepec was his right hand general - Miramón who died **with** him and Tomás Mejia - and Indigenous general under Maximilian! No one seems to bother reading real history!!

    • @mazapan383
      @mazapan383 Před 16 dny

      This was a project set by Mexican traitors to the Republic. There is a reason they were exiled. As a Mexican I find it loathsome that there is people calling it a cooperation between Mexicans and the French. Obviously that reasoning was put to rest when they sent Maximilian back in a casket.

    • @MachaeraMX
      @MachaeraMX Před 9 dny +1

      ​@@mazapan383the republic was, and is illegitimate and a failure. Among the Mexican people the Monarchies and Dictatorships have always been more popular.

    • @MachaeraMX
      @MachaeraMX Před 9 dny

      ​No sabes historia.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před 8 dny

      @@MachaeraMX Who doesn’t?

  • @yongci
    @yongci Před měsícem +3

    the mexican war of independance began in 1810 and it lasted until 1821 when independance was finally declared
    the mexican revolution is a different event that took place from 1910 to 1920

  • @crimson4810
    @crimson4810 Před měsícem +3

    Adiós, mamá Carlota
    Adiós, mi tierno amor

  • @andreabarrios5249
    @andreabarrios5249 Před měsícem +2

    Great video, thanks for sharing this amazing story! I am Mexican, from Querétaro in central Mexico, the city where Maximiliano was assassinated. Your video is quite “à propos” for Cinco de Mayo, which as mentioned, commemorates the only battle Mexico won against a European country 😊 Incidentally, one of mother's ancestors was French, and we believe he was one of the soldiers who stayed in Mexico after the failed French intervention 😉
    In school, we learned all about Maximiliano's demise, but I had always wondered what had happened to Carlota. I was surprised to find out she was Leopold's daughter and Princess Charlotte's namesake! She sure was smart and had great ideas for social reform, though being a woman at the time, ideas were supposed to have come from her husband, right? She seems to have been appreciated by many people in Mexico, yet we never learned much about her… It is impressive that she was sent as an ambassador and was able to plead their cause to Napoleon III, but neither he nor her relatives came to their aid, and she literally became a lost cause 😔
    In our school books, Maximiliano was portrayed as the bad guy, the invader who sought refuge in our city, in the church shown in the sepia photo @ 25:37 “Templo de la Santa Cruz.” Benito Juarez's government put a siege on the city and used canons to force Maximiliano out (we can still see the damage on the walls.) He was finally apprehended with his two supporters, Miramón and Mejía, and they were killed at gunpoint on “Cerro de las campanas,” where our state's university UAQ is now located. Years later, the Austrian government commissioned a chapel in his honour, which is frequently visited by schools and tourists. What was once a desolated hill has become a beautiful park and there is now a museum that recounts this time in Mexican history.

    • @Duquedecastro
      @Duquedecastro Před měsícem +1

      Querétaro was chosen because it was a very conservative bastion, not sure how your schools turned around on his legacy so completely.

  • @IgordaCosta0509
    @IgordaCosta0509 Před měsícem +2

    Listening to you talk about the Mexican Empire makes me want to hear your take on the Brazilian Empire. It’s such an oddity among the short lived empires and nascent republics in Latin American during the 19th century :)

  • @Dominion-
    @Dominion- Před 13 dny +3

    Empress Carlota of Mexico looks Hispanic even though she wasn’t.

  • @WarlockofSF
    @WarlockofSF Před měsícem +3

    She was Queen Victoria's first cousin

  • @miedk9871
    @miedk9871 Před měsícem +1

    Tak!

  • @lizorona5669
    @lizorona5669 Před měsícem +2

    That is true to have a queen in a king in Mexico, but the revolution was too strong for them 😢

  • @TheMensRea
    @TheMensRea Před měsícem +3

    As long as we all remember that colonization has been part of history of people since time immemorial.

    • @sierramist0789
      @sierramist0789 Před měsícem +1

      It was and is still brutal, violent and tragic for the victims.

  • @thedoctor7784
    @thedoctor7784 Před měsícem +3

    If I were her, I wouldn't let my cheating, stupid husband take the reins. My first day there I would've tackled the problems and economic issues first, then have a formal coronation.

  • @SayanHaqueOfficial
    @SayanHaqueOfficial Před měsícem +1

    I love yiu video ❤❤

  • @maureentuohy8672
    @maureentuohy8672 Před měsícem +3

    Brilliant! I have a B A in history but I always learn something new when I listen to your channel.
    PS
    Maxamilan had a face only a blind mother could love and he resented the fact that his wife was intelligent???? Go figure! 🙄

    • @arsangelica6858
      @arsangelica6858 Před měsícem

      What an odious twit Maximilian was. I can see possibilities for this situation, especially since they had the will to try to make it benefit everyone, but he was not the man for the job- and the only obvious thing that Carlotta was partially culpable for, the ‘adoption’ of the two boys that excluded their biological mother (it looks like it might actually have been a good idea if they had just brought all three of them in), may have had some grounding in the STD he seems to have given her. If she had been given the steering on something that was what she wanted to begin with… who knows? She was awfully young for all of that, though. He wasn’t old enough to be wise himself (nor was he advanced for his years, hah) and she was seven years younger still. Honestly, this was mostly Napoleon III’s fault. He faked the election and got them into that mess, set them up for failure, and then chickened out of shoring up the disaster he created. Napoleon III was a man who was so quick to pounce sexually that in a dark room he reportedly molested a bishop before realizing he’d caught the wrong kind of fish on the line. The only reason it wasn’t called rape, aside from his being Emperor, was that he didn’t give women the opportunity to say no. That is someone who is at base both utterly unprincipled and highly impulsive, and it figures that his political behavior would have the same tendency.