No video

Elizabeth Tudor Daughter to Father

elizabeth thinking back on her relationship with her father, and wonders if he ever loved her.
i own nothing

Пікірлер: 28

  • @16lucylover
    @16lucylover10 жыл бұрын

    Well she sure proved her father wrong by becoming one of the most successful rulers in english history!

  • @melissareynolds9345
    @melissareynolds934510 жыл бұрын

    I must say, this broke my heart. I lost my father before I was born and I stumbled onto this because of my love of Elizabeth. Thank you Alex, its beautiful!

  • @HikachiNakashima
    @HikachiNakashima11 жыл бұрын

    I want to believe in my heart Henry truly loved her so very much.

  • @jultschi1996
    @jultschi199613 жыл бұрын

    OMG its so sad Poor Elisabeth and poor anne both didn't deserve this. It was not fair . =(

  • @VCYT
    @VCYT6 жыл бұрын

    Henry would be so proud.

  • @jessicalantz368
    @jessicalantz36810 жыл бұрын

    The history of Elizabeth I and her relationship with Henry VIII is often misrepresented. The first couple years after Anne's judicial homicide Elizabeth was essentially forgotten. Henry VIII was quite fond of children in general and Elizabeth was treated better than many children considered "royal bastards" during the time in which she lived. Henry VIII treatment of his daughter Mary was terrible following his divorce from her mother & subsequent remarriage. Anne truly tormented Mary, and Henry repeatedly threatened and punished her. She was made a lady-in-waiting in her baby sister's household, but was treated atrociously. Mary & Elizabeth were actually close until Elizabeth was in her teens. Henry VIII was a typical royal father for his time. He ensured Elizabeth and Mary were heiresses and provided for upon his death. He always publicly acknowledged Elizabeth I, as he did his eldest son that was illegitimate. She was given land, titles, and would have had a marriage to a nobleman arranged for her. Her fate was expected to be that of all illegitimate royal children-luckily she was quite intelligent and became one of the best rulers of her time. All of our poor laws in the U.S. are originally based upon the Elizabethan Poor Laws created during her reign. It was one of the first of its kind, and was brilliant & progressive. It's a huge misconception that she was ill-treated by Henry VIII

  • @britndjustinfan1012

    @britndjustinfan1012

    10 жыл бұрын

    I do realise that she was not as poorly treated as Mary was but still she did not have the easiest of relationships with her father, and was only reconciled with him because of Katherine Parr and that was when their relationship mended and although Elizabeth always referred to herself as her Father's daughter I do believe that she would have resented him somewhat for the death of her mother and his ignorance of her and allowing others to claim she was someone else's child during her early years. I was focusing on their relationship in the show for this video.

  • @gidzmobug2323

    @gidzmobug2323

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jessica Lantz From what I have read, Henry's treatment of Mary was in large part at Anne's instigation.

  • @hekate5561

    @hekate5561

    5 жыл бұрын

    Anne was not all-powerful. Her fate more than showed that. She could not have made Harry do anything he did not want to do. She was afraid of Mary, because if she ever came to power, Anne knew what would happen to her and her family. Cranmer's fate proved her right. If you were that worried about someone would you want them to look after your defenceless toddler? I doubt that having Mary anywhere near Elizabeth was Anne's idea. Also, killing her mother and uncle, and more or less banish the rest of her family, ruining her mother's name and than forgetting about her after being doted on for three years... If I were Elizabeth, I would consider Henry's treatment cruel. I don't really think he was crueler to Mary per se. The problem was that Mary was older and took her mother's side. Henry saw that as an insult and attack. Elizabeth on the other hand, different from Mary, never really remembered a mother's or father's love. So the argument is really about whether having something and losing it is worse than never really having it.

  • @cakecrumb095

    @cakecrumb095

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yes that is true, but I think what makes Elizabeth's treatment seem harsher is that her father completely killed her mother, whereas Mary's mother was essentially banished. Banishment is less cruel than murder. This also happened when Elizabeth was a toddler, who still very much needed her mother. Mary on the other hand was already a teenager and could technically take care of herself.

  • @ineffablegabe

    @ineffablegabe

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@cakecrumb095 please don't take offense to this, but I believe it's easier to deal with the loss of a mother you never knew. My biological mother died when I was a toddler and I hardly remember her. I wouldn't even know what she looked like if there weren't pictures of her. I was raised since a young age by my step mother, and my step mom fell ill when I was a teen. My step mom had always been healthy, so seeing her suddenly terribly ill was devistating. I remember being so, so scared of loosing her. One of the worst times of my life. She's okay now, though no longer very healthy, and I worry for her health every day, with good reason. The fear and pain that grips me at just the thought of loosing her is a billion times more than any kind of emotion I've ever felt about my birth mom. Obviously I'm greatful to my birth mom for giving me life, and of course i understand that dying in an accident was no fault of hers, and I do wish she didn't have to die so young. But since I hardly knew her, I never even grieved for her. How can I, when all I know of her is the little bits that others tell me? On the other hand, loosing someone I've known for years, even just a friend, more so the mother who raised me, I don't think I could take it. I'm 23 years old, supposedly I don't need a mother any longer. This is absolutely false. Old men and women have lost their even older mothers, and been thoroughly devestated by the loss. Believe me, I speak from personal experience, and lots of first hand witnessing. (My bff lost her mother to cancer when she was 18, she's still not dealing well with it to this day, and she's 26 now.) So loosing her mother as a teen was one of the worst things that could've happened to Mary Tudor. Especially keeping in mind that she'd been separated from and not seen her since she was a prepubescent girl. Compared to this, Elizabeth lost the mother she barely got to be a daughter to, someone whose face she undoubtedly didn't even remember. And yes, this is deeply sad on it's own, but it's definitely not enough to make her feel the kind of debilitating grief one feels at the loss of someone you actually knew. Besides, it's not like the role of mother was never filled in Elizabeth's life after Anne's death. She had adult ladies paid by her father to look after her, ensure her health and safety. She didn't call them mothers, but the women who took care of her in her childhood, certainly filled the gap left by Anne. So Elizabeth knew some form of parental love, I believe. Again, I stress that I don't mean to offend you, I just speak from life long personal experience. Of course, maybe you have your own personal experience that makes you disagree with me, in which case, please feel free to not agree with me. But I maintain for myself, that true loss is that of someone you actually have known. Not someone who sadly ended up being your missed opportunity. And in a way Mary's mother was murdered, too. But hers was a far, far slower psychologically torturing death that was drawn out for years. She literally died locked away for years from all those that she ever loved. In the last whole decade of her life, she experienced no love or kindness, did not get one reason to feel any joy. She was undoubtedly depressed as hell. It's a testament to her strength that she didn't just kill herself to escape the loneliness and monotony of her piss poor life.

  • @scarllet86
    @scarllet8614 жыл бұрын

    I like it very much!

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101213 жыл бұрын

    @TexasCenaGurl I agree completly, it has often been said that the two of them shared a unique bond and I belive this has something to do with Anne. :)

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101213 жыл бұрын

    @randomstuff8991 Yes history would have been very different indeed...Although there are some poitives, even with Anne's death, she did give the world Elizabeth

  • @beatricesanfilippo6925
    @beatricesanfilippo69255 жыл бұрын

    I wonder there will be a video with Obi-Wan and his daughter Sabine with always epic Song daughter to father by Lindsay Lohan;)

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101212 жыл бұрын

    @HistoriesHorrible Ha ha there is no denying that she was amazing to do what she did after the gild hood she had is truly extraordinary

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101212 жыл бұрын

    @jultschi1996 Aww thanks. No neither of them deserved what Henry, a man who should have loved and cared for them did.

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101214 жыл бұрын

    @scarllet86 thanks im glad

  • @liane51100
    @liane5110013 жыл бұрын

    @sailorgirl2316 it's 'a confession of a broken heart" to Lindsay Lohan

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101213 жыл бұрын

    @alexuzzable Thank you I am glad

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101212 жыл бұрын

    @TexasCenaGurl

  • @MSLJH13
    @MSLJH1312 жыл бұрын

    Lindsey Lohan Confessions of a broken heart

  • @sailorgirl2316
    @sailorgirl231613 жыл бұрын

    Who sings the song and whats the name of the song?

  • @user-zy8zr2vd8x

    @user-zy8zr2vd8x

    5 ай бұрын

    *Lindsay Lohan.*

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101212 жыл бұрын

    @lovehurts79121 She was the perfect heir other than gender can you imagine what she would have been able to achieve in a world were being female was not a burden??

  • @redrasegarden
    @redrasegarden12 жыл бұрын

    @randomstuff8991 true. but are we to argue that elizabith was none the less a grat ruller inspit of her gender?

  • @chanaberlove8720

    @chanaberlove8720

    7 жыл бұрын

    what does her gender have to do with her rule? She didnt rely on a marriage for power, which I think was the reason she did such a good job. Henry was a terrible king partially because he was driven by emotions and greed. I think emotions tend to cloud judgement.

  • @britndjustinfan1012
    @britndjustinfan101213 жыл бұрын

    @sailorgirl2316 Confessions of a broken heart, Lindsay Lohan :)