Vijaytha Sathyanarayanan Thank you for helping me understand because she already heard and was made to feel outcast in the house and outside. So they really didn’t protect a whole lot they added to the distress and sorrow of feeling unwanted.
@@Kool2.0 Her race played more into her mistreatment. Well, it was horrible, but I will relent that they did their 'best' in treating her closely to their station as possible. She was educated as a genteel woman, she was capable of writing, reading... In real life, her natural father made sure his other illegitimate children received inheritance money (2 of them--they're Dido's step-siblings but they're white), while he didn't mention Dido at all in his will. But fortunately, Dido received inheritance from her adoptive father and her aunts from that side of the family so ensuring her 'free' status...
@@phaatsogood6563 we are not to apply our morality to the 18th century . An illegitimate child was rarely raised in the family or adopted ( usually they was put in orphanage, or sended away with a maid if the family was rich, and receive a small inheritance at age appropriate to hel to marry someone, or sometime raised as maid companionship inside of the house . The case of her been black and born from a slave to others family at the time, could would have been dreadful . Because they are rich they are able to build a gold cage around here ... in the movie she is supposed to be 16-17 so she was kept safe and isolated avoid conversation that could mortify her.
1:04-1:11 "Before the Last Supper, Judas went to the chiefpriests and agreed to hand overJesus in exchange for 30 silver coins (shekles). Jesus was then arrested in Gethsemane, where Judas revealed Jesus' identity to the soldiers by giving him a kiss."
And a kiss back then was usually shared between close friends, someone you trust or wish to take care of. How ironic that Judas was ready to give him one, knowing full when Jesus knew he traded him and sold him out to the mob. Chilling really.
Marsha Creary No she wasn't. Her father was British Naval officer and he asked his uncle to raise her as a British aristocrat. She was not a slave or anyone's mistress.
Denice G. How would you explain that she wasn't allowed to dine with them? That her suitor had to be chosen with consideration of her skin color and other glaring commonalities?
Marsha Creary No. she was free, she had capital, she was properly married and had legitimate issue, the last of her great-grandchildren ended up as a white man in apartheid South Africa. But her illegitimacy doomed her to a lower social status.
Dido had a right to know. They still kept her from certain dinner settings. They were a bit shame of her color. #its aggravating
I think it was to protect her from the racism of her period. They cared for her otherwise and she got a decent inheritance
Vijaytha Sathyanarayanan Thank you for helping me understand because she already heard and was made to feel outcast in the house and outside. So they really didn’t protect a whole lot they added to the distress and sorrow of feeling unwanted.
It's because she was illegitimate
@@Kool2.0 Her race played more into her mistreatment. Well, it was horrible, but I will relent that they did their 'best' in treating her closely to their station as possible. She was educated as a genteel woman, she was capable of writing, reading... In real life, her natural father made sure his other illegitimate children received inheritance money (2 of them--they're Dido's step-siblings but they're white), while he didn't mention Dido at all in his will. But fortunately, Dido received inheritance from her adoptive father and her aunts from that side of the family so ensuring her 'free' status...
@@phaatsogood6563 we are not to apply our morality to the 18th century . An illegitimate child was rarely raised in the family or adopted ( usually they was put in orphanage, or sended away with a maid if the family was rich, and receive a small inheritance at age appropriate to hel to marry someone, or sometime raised as maid companionship inside of the house .
The case of her been black and born from a slave to others family at the time, could would have been dreadful . Because they are rich they are able to build a gold cage around here ... in the movie she is supposed to be 16-17 so she was kept safe and isolated avoid conversation that could mortify her.
Love this movie
I look for to every movie he has made and will make.
Sam will be a super star.
1:04-1:11 "Before the Last Supper, Judas went to the chiefpriests and agreed to hand overJesus in exchange for 30 silver coins (shekles). Jesus was then arrested in Gethsemane, where Judas revealed Jesus' identity to the soldiers by giving him a kiss."
And a kiss back then was usually shared between close friends, someone you trust or wish to take care of. How ironic that Judas was ready to give him one, knowing full when Jesus knew he traded him and sold him out to the mob.
Chilling really.
J'adore ce film merci❤️❤️❤️❤️
Wow!
Dido was the British version of Sally Hemings?
Marsha Creary No she wasn't. Her father was British Naval officer and he asked his uncle to raise her as a British aristocrat. She was not a slave or anyone's mistress.
Denice G. How would you explain that she wasn't allowed to dine with them? That her suitor had to be chosen with consideration of her skin color and other glaring commonalities?
@@marshacreary9771 She was an illegitmate child.
Marsha Creary No. she was free, she had capital, she was properly married and had legitimate issue, the last of her great-grandchildren ended up as a white man in apartheid South Africa.
But her illegitimacy doomed her to a lower social status.
@@meeeka 🙏
Vicker en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vickers
not vickers as in the defense firm, but son of a vicar, i.e. son of an anglican priest
Janos Marothy So Vicker's House is An Anglican Priest's establishment?
Weaponized History