As a HUGE Tudor history nerd, this video was brilliant. I was well chuffed that I knew so many people that were listed in that book that mapped the spots where each was buried. Thank you for the wonderful video.
It’s horrifying that Anne’s body was pretty much thrown in a discarded box and forgotten. I wish that Elizabeth I had done something - anything! - to give her mother (as well as her relatives and the other victims of Henry VIII) a dignified re burial. Elizabeth could have done it quietly to keep controversy to a minimum. I’m so thankful that Queen Victoria did the right thing. It was long due.
While I don’t have any evidence, and it is only my own opinion, although Elizabeth might have wanted to do something about it, I don’t think it would have been very wise to do so. Her own position was shaky, even though she was very good at holding onto it. Elizabeth needed stability, and bringing up the controversy related to the victims of her father and their executions would not have helped her cause (especially considering how the matter was intimately related to religion). It would have meant taking an opposing stance to her father (and his godly-approved decision), in a situation where there was no proof of her mother’s innocence, and there would have been several protests at the respectful reburial of a convicted adulteress. In the end, she would have known that future monarchs would make changes to the Tower and may have placed her faith there. I believe that she was forward thinking enough to realise that although it would not have happened in her time, gender equality would eventually become important to society (although the decline of religion and of the right to rule are a different matter). There were so many strong females figures at the time. Katherine Parr as an example. Certainly it is only with the hindsight of several centuries that women’s rights had improved enough to look back on Anne Boleyn and others with a degree of sympathy and without triggering the powder-keg that was their political situation at the time. In addition, Elizabeth was very young when her mother died, and her own life was incredibly busy. I think it would have been too sore a wound to touch until times moved on. Although I’m sure that Elizabeth may have regretted it.
@@Emily.R.W wonderfully stated. I agree that with all she had too protect during her rule Elizabeth would have wisely felt it not too any advantage to move her mother.
Elizabeth was advised to leave matters alone so as not to call attention to her own illegitimacy...........but she did honour her mother in many subtle ways......
Thank you so much for running this channel, Kevin! I really wish I'd had a history teacher like you teaching me during high school, at the time we were just reading from books, it wasn't engaging at all and I thought history was boring...how wrong I was. I feel very sad that Anne was just tossed in a box and forgotten. Absolutely horrifying to imagine what it would have been like, walking to one's own death. Tragic.
I agree with you, my History teacher smoked cigar’s and smelled gross and was boring. I barely passed. I love History and have done a lot of reading now I am older 😊
Elizabeth had a throne chair(effectively) set up in her mother's family's home parish. She had it placed so she could honor her mother and probably her uncle as well. She also wore a ring, removed@ her death, with her initial(a huge "E") which, when opened, revealed miniatures of Anne, her mother,& herself. Elizabeth NEVER forgot her mother. She did, however, know what to say and when. Much like her sister Mary Tudor, she knew well the horror that could hit you- Queen or not.
She had a shaky grasp on the throne 2 begin with(as each Tudor monarch did)& she knew it. Being a woman wasn't helping her confidence either. She COULD NOT afford to show allegiance (@least publicly ) 2 any certain group. She was way too smart for that. She was, after all, both her father & her Mothers daughter. She learned, I think, a lot of lessons from each of them.
I am of Greek descent but I greatly admire the critical analysis of a British historian that presents researched facts impartially and looks at history through the eyes of the common person.
Anne Boleyn resisted a relationship with the most powerful man in England for several years before finally being worn down and also used as a pawn in her father's political machinations. There were lots of letters that are still extant of her rebuffing his advances.
She tried to stop Henry from looting the monastery. He killed her, she should have known he had no mercy for Moore or Fisher or poor monks. I believe she had options but thought she was destined to have a Tudor prince.
I find it absolutely ghastly & barbaric, that people would gather around and watch someone get executed. Ann Boleyns only mistake was she became involved with that Fat Slob Henry the viii. Your history lessons are absolutely fascinating.
Many courtiers would have been ordered to be there by Henry or Cromwell to show loyalty and to try to convey some legitimacy on the disgraceful proceedings.
Thank you so much for this video. It always feels there are only these famous names are resting there, but I had no idea there are so much more poor souls resting under St.Peter ad vincula. I love the Tower- but the beauty of the building makes one sometimes forget its gruesome and horrible history.... So much lifes cruelly ended much too soon.
I will, thank you, and thanks for the SUPER, it's much appreciated. I'm glad your children are enjoying the videos too, history shouldn't have to be dull 👍🏻
Ghastly beyond imagination and such an important piece of history. Also, you helped dismiss a family myth. My dear parent was forever going on about always wearing best underclothes because 'when you die, that's the last thing people will remember'. Thank you. This video forever dispelled any further concern I harbored about death and underwear.
For those who don't know about St Peter ad vincula, ad vincula means in chains (which is very appropriate for a prison). It was on his feast day (1st August) in 1323 Roger Mortimer escaped from the Tower of London by supplying the men guarding him with drugged wine. He had rebelled against Edward II in the Marcher War which ended with the Battpe of Boroughbridge. Edward would come to regret not executing him as Mortimer returned in September 1326 as one of the leaders of the army that disposed him.
@@perniciouspete4986 the feast of Saint Peter ad Vincula was being celebrated on the day that Roger Mortimer escaped from the Yower of London, whic contains the Royal Chapel dedicated to this saint and has been there for the best part of 1,000 years. It is the ad Vincula part of his name that is appropriate to the Tower of London in its use as a prison..
Amazing as ever Kevin, masterful storytelling! Absolute no specific interest in this period personally, but still hooked on this sort of material, thanks again!
The way he tells it is the thing. A rare gift. A master story teller can turn a simple picnic into an adventure! "I'll tell you a tale! Oh the Sun, oh the bees and flowers and the wine and cheese! If only you were there!" He has that gift of wordsmithing. Weaving a thought.
I felt nothing but suffocation as we queued for our tickets. I was struggling for air, and I had to walk away, leaving my husband to get the tickets, as I turned I saw the place of death of either Anne Boleyn or Mary Queen of Scots. That explained everything. We only went on to see the Crown Jewels. Super- hypersensitive. At Hurst Castle I saw the ghost of one of Charles I soldiers, walking beside me. In Scotland we were going to visit a castle. I pulled the car up, but had bad feelings about it. I drove off. In a documentary about 2 years later, I read that it was haunted by several unfortunate beings who were believed to walk there.
Hi Kevin, thank you so much for starting/running this UA-cam channel! Listening to these stories from you is always a such a special treat especially because of your professional background and career as a bowman, don't think anyone else could create that atmosphere and effect. Looking forward to more videos and films in the future! Cheers! :)
To say that quote is one of my favourites I think would be a bit macabre...but in its own way, it is - he refuses to hold back, he will not shirk from the absolute horror of the way these people ended up in this chapel, and he paints such a vivid image of the atmosphere he feels when he's there, that it's impossible not to feel the hairs on the back of your neck stand up when you read his words. My grandmother said similar about visiting Tuol Slengh in Cambodia, where Pol Pot did his very worst; the birds, she said, refused to enter the grounds of the building. They'd sit on the trees outside the grounds - but never go in. The scent of death was all around.
Excellent video Kevin. I knew that Anne had been exhumed but I never heard the details. You have explained it quite clearly and tactfully. Thank you. Your videos are beautifully made and very enjoyable. Best wishes from Ohio, USA.
I just found your channel today. I absolutely love history. Your country & what it offers is a plethora of just that. I'm from the US & am interested in all kinds of history, English being one of them. Your knowledge is superb & I love listening to all that you have to share. I am in awe of all the castles your country has albeit sad that so many of them have been lost forever, left a shell or reduced to ruble. The first video I watched was your visit to Chepstow. I want to commend you on the quality of equipment you use to film. I have a smart tv with 4K. Never have I seen such a crisp, vivid, & colorful picture than yours on my tv. Your pounds were well spent. Thank you & I will be watching your videos from now on.
Anne’s memorial stone does not mark the last resting place of her actual remains, and that she lies beneath Lady Rochford’s memorial. We were informed of that by a Yeoman Warder last year.
Fascinating!! I finally got to go inside the chapel on my last visit to England. We got a tour and sat in the pews during a talk, but didn’t get to walk around and explore.
Haunting and thought provoking. The end of their days, spilled out onto the green. I need to get over and tour the tower. Excellent as always. Thanks Kevin.
Bigger questions : Why has she never had her name cleared and why has she never been given a proper burial, preferably with her daughter? It is not right to keep her there for tourist dollars. Set her free.
Yes I agree. I think she should had been at least placed in Westminster Abbey with her daughter Queen Elizabeth the first. Henry VIII reign was not our finest period in history.
Not knowing what was said about her on the altar stone, it's hard to judge, but it seems to me that her daughter should have made sure that the full interpretation was given, not just the prejudicial Henry version.
Elizabeth didn't care about any member of her family anymore than her father or grandfather did. She imprisoned her own sister in the very same tower for gods sake. Just a nobody named Mary queen of scots
Hi Kevin, I've only recently joined the channel. History was always my favourite subject and still is. In times when so many ignorant people are complaining and trying to effect change in the world, it appears to me they completely misunderstand the meaning of the word history! Thank you for all your efforts to keep the subject alive and interesting. I only wish we had had You Tube to accompany my schooling back in the day. many thanks
Another brilliant video on an interesting subject, highlighting the complexity, and length of our history, one of the basic problems of such a rich history is keeping a track on it, thanks for doing your part in the process, education being the final part, keeping history alive😎🏹🙏
My word, talk about a necessary restoration! It reminds me of the “Bone Church” in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic. There they had so many bones (from my understanding) from people who died in the Black Death that an artist was commissioned to use the bones to decorate the subterranean chapel. I personally think reburying the dead a much better thing to do. Such a fascinating video! Thank you!
Greetings once again from nova Scotia, thanks again for another great video. I was totally unaware of this chapter in history, I love the way you can tell a story, please keep up the good work and as always best regards Arthur
The guy who examined Anne Bolyn's bones should have made some reference to her having her head cut off and whether there was any evidence to that on the bones.
Exactly what I thought I also was waiting and looking forward to maybe a line drawing at least of her bones, but with so much pressure under royal orders and so many bodies skeletons to have to deal with I guess they didn't have the time nor temerity do this.
I'm guessing it might not have been possible. These bodies were prisoners and traitors to the crown. They wouldn't have been embalmed. Over two hundred years had passed. Decomposition would have been complete. Just lifting the box would have shifted the bones and most likely the skull would have moved within the box. Plus, weapon impacts on bone wasn't truly studied until the 1940s. He might not have known what to even look for.
Really enjoyed this one 👍👍 the Knight's bones are dust, and his good sword rust - his soul is with the saints I trust. Can't get enough of these videos.. big history buff. I hope you gain enough traction (not that UA-cam isn't a good enough platform) to end up on a BBC history documentary. Something particularly morbid and gruesome, mind!
Looking very Dapper Kev mate, thanks for another great Education, of course she was set thats our belief, but again thanks for a masterful Clasd cheers...Will and Elainà🇮🇲👍🇮🇲👍🇮🇲
love this content! you're so knowledgable, it's such fun to watch you go through the secrets in these old castles and retell the stories of their former lords. can't wait for more!!
I remember watching a documentary on the tower of London ,where it was said that the place of execution on tower green was only came about in Victorian times ,for visitors who wanted to no where Anne was executed,They actually now believe that the executions took place on the parade ground
I wished I had studied who actually was buried there before I went into the chapel... but then again, I never thought I was going to be able to, but my fiance's brother was a Beefeater, so another relative with me on the Tower tour took me there, as well as to other incredible places the general public weren't privy to.
Watching again, my heart really goes out to Queens Anne, Jane, Katherine, all those mostly victims of despotism. My hat goes off to the swordsman that took Queen Annes head, as I really don't think she was aware when she went to her human ending. I wish I knew his name?
But what about the bodies of executed traitors? Under the Treason Act of 1351 (long before Tudor times), both Anne Boleyn and Katharine Howard were guilty of high treason.
@@allenjenkins7947 I think most of us are aware that where his two wives were concerned, Henry V111's answer to get rid of them was to accuse them of high treason. Like Putin, you didn't oppose the King or else you were accused of high treason yourself.
@@Boogledigs Adultery by, or with, the King's wife, his unmarried daughter, or the wife of an heir to the throne were defined as high treason. The reason for this seemingly harsh definition was that it could place doubts on the legitimacy of any offspring and cloud the line of succession to the throne. Civil wars had been fought for this reason in the past.
Your channel just popped up on my home page. Funny how life works. I am an American and ever since my high school years (1970’s) I have been fascinated by the Tudors and English history in general. This video was perfect for my interests and I immediately s. Looking forward to the rest to come! Thank you. You do an awesome job of narrating.
Yes, but it was quite simple really. The priory where Richard III was buried was sold off and demolished after the reformation and the dead were left where they lay. There's more under the car park than the king. It was the same at Bisham Abbey 👍🏻
@@thehistorysquad Wow that is so sad. You would think the Priory would say... "Oh and by the way, you remember Richard III?" but... they may have not even known at that point I suppose. Thanks for the added info!
at least it was quick ( if done properly)......would you prefer to watch them starve to death or burnt alive or boiled alive. Given various options i would prefer the head coming off or if a option drowning maybe less horrific.
Love your show Kevin. After all this time. I felt so sad for her. Henry the eighth was just evil to his wife's. Poor things. As always your very informative. Thank you Kevin. From Ohio USA. Stay safe. Love listening to you.
I spent time in St Peter's in the fall of 1984. I am empathic and can pick up emotions from places. I thought when I walked in I would feel over whelmed by the tragedies. Instead I felt a deep sense of peace and acceptance. I felt relief as if all those who had struggled and suffered were glad it was over.
Very interesting & Thank You Very Much . I have a very long Family history in England dating back to the 11 hundreds & in 1450 I had a relative named Sir Richard Dobbs who in 1450 was Lord Mayor of London 😮 in the 15 to 16 hundreds some Family where moved to Antrim Ireland & John Dobbs built a Castle Named Dobbs My more modern relatives from England possibly came to America in the early 17 hundreds. So as my history is so very much a part of British history all your Films & Lessons are very much what I love about learning from the past. Again Thank You So Much. When I visit London I will do my own tour of Whitechapel & JTR sites my fist stop will be WhiteChaple Tube Station & Polly Nickels & Poppies Fish & Chips on Hanbury Street ❤ Cheers 🥂 Juniper & Gin ✅🍻
Another engaging & well researched Vid- thankyou for that Kevin,..Did the autopsy exam of her bones confirm it was Anne, as a good examiner would or should have mentioned something about her neck bones, bit gory really but a definite positive ID ..
Queen Anne Boleyn, married and in love with Henry, and then destroyed in reputation as well as body. I am sure when she went to meet her Savior, her house was in order. Not so her Husband who manipulated Law and Church and sadly his own mind to pervert truth. I trust now she rests in peace, because I feel we all have peace concerning her. And she did provide the Kingdom with a most intelligent and able Queen; Elizabeth. Excellent poignant account Kevin, you did good.
nice one, Kevin. Tbf, McAulay had a point- they don`t seem to have left an awful lot of detail & character in the building-from the exterior, at least.
Hi I have a question if both Mary queen of Scots and Lady Jane Grey were both still alive in 1603 and Lady Jane Grey became Elizabeth’s air and then would there have been some kind of beef between Lady Jane Grey and Mary queen of Scots just like it was with Elizabeth the 1 🤷♂️
As a HUGE Tudor history nerd, this video was brilliant. I was well chuffed that I knew so many people that were listed in that book that mapped the spots where each was buried. Thank you for the wonderful video.
Super, glad you enjoyed it. Cheers 👍🏻
Thanks. We visited Tower Green on a bright day, but I found it a very sad place full of tears and darkness.
Love your video's! I'm a paraplegic and cannot get out. Your video's expand my world and make my days so much better! Please keep up the great work!
Wow, that's great to hear Victoria, thank you for watching and your very kind comment. It's my pleasure 👍🏻
It’s horrifying that Anne’s body was pretty much thrown in a discarded box and forgotten. I wish that Elizabeth I had done something - anything! - to give her mother (as well as her relatives and the other victims of Henry VIII) a dignified re burial. Elizabeth could have done it quietly to keep controversy to a minimum. I’m so thankful that Queen Victoria did the right thing. It was long due.
While I don’t have any evidence, and it is only my own opinion, although Elizabeth might have wanted to do something about it, I don’t think it would have been very wise to do so. Her own position was shaky, even though she was very good at holding onto it. Elizabeth needed stability, and bringing up the controversy related to the victims of her father and their executions would not have helped her cause (especially considering how the matter was intimately related to religion).
It would have meant taking an opposing stance to her father (and his godly-approved decision), in a situation where there was no proof of her mother’s innocence, and there would have been several protests at the respectful reburial of a convicted adulteress.
In the end, she would have known that future monarchs would make changes to the Tower and may have placed her faith there. I believe that she was forward thinking enough to realise that although it would not have happened in her time, gender equality would eventually become important to society (although the decline of religion and of the right to rule are a different matter). There were so many strong females figures at the time. Katherine Parr as an example.
Certainly it is only with the hindsight of several centuries that women’s rights had improved enough to look back on Anne Boleyn and others with a degree of sympathy and without triggering the powder-keg that was their political situation at the time. In addition, Elizabeth was very young when her mother died, and her own life was incredibly busy. I think it would have been too sore a wound to touch until times moved on. Although I’m sure that Elizabeth may have regretted it.
Elizabeth I might not have known that her mother was just thrown in an arrow box. I'm sure nobody dared tell her anything she didn't want to hear.
@@Emily.R.W wonderfully stated. I agree that with all she had too protect during her rule Elizabeth would have wisely felt it not too any advantage to move her mother.
I'm fairly sure Elizabeth could not have reburied Anne quietly. I also suspect she couldn't have cared less about Henry's other 'victims'.
Elizabeth was advised to leave matters alone so as not to call attention to her own illegitimacy...........but she did honour her mother in many subtle ways......
You got my teenage son and daughter both watching your channel...you're a magnificent storyteller and pick such interesting content
Thank you so much for running this channel, Kevin! I really wish I'd had a history teacher like you teaching me during high school, at the time we were just reading from books, it wasn't engaging at all and I thought history was boring...how wrong I was.
I feel very sad that Anne was just tossed in a box and forgotten. Absolutely horrifying to imagine what it would have been like, walking to one's own death. Tragic.
Thanks for your comment Rhys. I can't imagine what it would have been like to walk to my execution like that 👍🏻
I agree with you, my History teacher smoked cigar’s and smelled gross and was boring. I barely passed. I love History and have done a lot of reading now I am older 😊
Elizabeth had a throne chair(effectively) set up in her mother's family's home parish. She had it placed so she could honor her mother and probably her uncle as well. She also wore a ring, removed@ her death, with her initial(a huge "E") which, when opened, revealed miniatures of Anne, her mother,& herself. Elizabeth NEVER forgot her mother.
She did, however, know what to say and when. Much like her sister Mary Tudor, she knew well the horror that could hit you- Queen or not.
She had a shaky grasp on the throne 2 begin with(as each Tudor monarch did)& she knew it. Being a woman wasn't helping her confidence either. She COULD NOT afford to show allegiance (@least publicly ) 2 any certain group. She was way too smart for that. She was, after all, both her father & her Mothers daughter. She learned, I think, a lot of lessons from each of them.
I am of Greek descent but I greatly admire the critical analysis of a British historian that presents researched facts impartially and looks at history through the eyes of the common person.
Grik god
@@djordjekaljevic5725 Unlike most Greeks I don't believe in Gods of any sort.
Anne Boleyn was a perfect example of being careful what you wish for.
Theyndid it to Diana
I honestly dont think she wished for it. I think he forced it on her.
Anne Boleyn resisted a relationship with the most powerful man in England for several years before finally being worn down and also used as a pawn in her father's political machinations. There were lots of letters that are still extant of her rebuffing his advances.
She tried to stop Henry from looting the monastery. He killed her, she should have known he had no mercy for Moore or Fisher or poor monks. I believe she had options but thought she was destined to have a Tudor prince.
I find it absolutely ghastly & barbaric, that people would gather around and watch someone get executed. Ann Boleyns only mistake was she became involved with that Fat Slob Henry the viii. Your history lessons are absolutely fascinating.
Many courtiers would have been ordered to be there by Henry or Cromwell to show loyalty and to try to convey some legitimacy on the disgraceful proceedings.
He wasn’t a fat slob at the time. Very handsome.
It's one early form of public entertainment since there was no TV or Cable. Though I'm sure there were many people who looked away.
@@warrengwonka2479 and very formidable too, I am guessing he was quite attractive to Ladies of the day akin to a top football player or rugby chappie.
@@MickRiley or a certain red-haired Prince Harry…
Thank you so much for this video. It always feels there are only these famous names are resting there, but I had no idea there are so much more poor souls resting under St.Peter ad vincula. I love the Tower- but the beauty of the building makes one sometimes forget its gruesome and horrible history.... So much lifes cruelly ended much too soon.
Thanks! Keep churning out the brilliant work and lets get more and more people into the wonders of history
I will, thank you, and thanks for the SUPER, it's much appreciated.
I'm glad your children are enjoying the videos too, history shouldn't have to be dull 👍🏻
Ghastly beyond imagination and such an important piece of history. Also, you helped dismiss a family myth.
My dear parent was forever going on about always wearing best underclothes because 'when you die, that's the last thing people will remember'. Thank you. This video forever dispelled any further concern I harbored about death and underwear.
For those who don't know about St Peter ad vincula, ad vincula means in chains (which is very appropriate for a prison). It was on his feast day (1st August) in 1323 Roger Mortimer escaped from the Tower of London by supplying the men guarding him with drugged wine. He had rebelled against Edward II in the Marcher War which ended with the Battpe of Boroughbridge. Edward would come to regret not executing him as Mortimer returned in September 1326 as one of the leaders of the army that disposed him.
Great comment Neil, thanks 👍🏻
Deposed.
Neil of Longbeck -
I remember learning that.
St. Peter ad Vincula wasn't a prison: it was, and still is, a CHURCH. You're not paying attention.
@@perniciouspete4986 the feast of Saint Peter ad Vincula was being celebrated on the day that Roger Mortimer escaped from the Yower of London, whic contains the Royal Chapel dedicated to this saint and has been there for the best part of 1,000 years. It is the ad Vincula part of his name that is appropriate to the Tower of London in its use as a prison..
Another brilliantly fascinating video, I really wish history was narrated like this when I was at school. Keep the stories coming.
Thanks Lesley, will do!
Amazing as ever Kevin, masterful storytelling! Absolute no specific interest in this period personally, but still hooked on this sort of material, thanks again!
Cheers Tom, I appreciate that 👍
The way he tells it is the thing. A rare gift.
A master story teller can turn a simple picnic into an adventure! "I'll tell you a tale! Oh the Sun, oh the bees and flowers and the wine and cheese! If only you were there!"
He has that gift of wordsmithing. Weaving a thought.
Then this gentleman has done his job excellently in teaching History!
I felt nothing but suffocation as we queued for our tickets. I was struggling for air, and I had to walk away, leaving my husband to get the tickets, as I turned I saw the place of death of either Anne Boleyn or Mary Queen of Scots. That explained everything. We only went on to see the Crown Jewels. Super- hypersensitive.
At Hurst Castle I saw the ghost of one of Charles I soldiers, walking beside me.
In Scotland we were going to visit a castle. I pulled the car up, but had bad feelings about it. I drove off.
In a documentary about 2 years later, I read that it was haunted by several unfortunate beings who were believed to walk there.
It’s amazing how you are able to pack so much interesting and pertinent information into one short film. Great work!
Glad you enjoy it!
Hi Kevin, thank you so much for starting/running this UA-cam channel! Listening to these stories from you is always a such a special treat especially because of your professional background and career as a bowman, don't think anyone else could create that atmosphere and effect. Looking forward to more videos and films in the future! Cheers! :)
Thanks Alexander, it really is my pleasure!
Wake up, make a coffee, load up youtube and notice The History Squad have a new video out. These are my kind of mornings 😊
😃 Happy Days!!
To say that quote is one of my favourites I think would be a bit macabre...but in its own way, it is - he refuses to hold back, he will not shirk from the absolute horror of the way these people ended up in this chapel, and he paints such a vivid image of the atmosphere he feels when he's there, that it's impossible not to feel the hairs on the back of your neck stand up when you read his words. My grandmother said similar about visiting Tuol Slengh in Cambodia, where Pol Pot did his very worst; the birds, she said, refused to enter the grounds of the building. They'd sit on the trees outside the grounds - but never go in. The scent of death was all around.
Your knowledge of history is fantastic! Thank you.
Excellent video Kevin. I knew that Anne had been exhumed but I never heard the details. You have explained it quite clearly and tactfully. Thank you. Your videos are beautifully made and very enjoyable. Best wishes from Ohio, USA.
You're very welcome Jerry, I'm glad you enjoyed this one.
Brilliant channel
I just found your channel today. I absolutely love history. Your country & what it offers
is a plethora of just that. I'm from the US & am interested in all kinds of history, English being one of them. Your knowledge is superb & I love listening to all that you have to share. I am in awe of all the castles your country has albeit sad that so many of them have been lost forever, left a shell or reduced to ruble. The first video I watched was your visit to Chepstow. I want to commend you on the quality of equipment you use to film. I have a smart tv with 4K. Never have I seen such a crisp, vivid, & colorful picture than yours on my tv. Your pounds were well spent. Thank you & I will be watching your videos from now on.
Wow, that's great to hear Elizabeth, I'm glad the quality is good as I never quite get to watch them on a high def tv, just a computer monitor. 👍🏻
Thanks Kevin for another cracking tale 🤘🏹
Anne’s memorial stone does not mark the last resting place of her actual remains, and that she lies beneath Lady Rochford’s memorial.
We were informed of that by a Yeoman Warder last year.
Fascinating!! I finally got to go inside the chapel on my last visit to England. We got a tour and sat in the pews during a talk, but didn’t get to walk around and explore.
What a nicely done video, short, full of interesting information
Absolutely love your channel Kevin! Thank you for helping to keep such important history alive 🙂
My pleasure!
Looking smart there Kevin , & thank you for today's. Such sad tales of the old place . ...
Haunting and thought provoking. The end of their days, spilled out onto the green. I need to get over and tour the tower. Excellent as always. Thanks Kevin.
This was a great bit of history Kevin. Thanks for sharing
Very good. Thanks for upload.
Bigger questions : Why has she never had her name cleared and why has she never been given a proper burial, preferably with her daughter?
It is not right to keep her there for tourist dollars. Set her free.
Yes I agree. I think she should had been at least placed in Westminster Abbey with her daughter Queen Elizabeth the first. Henry VIII reign was not our finest period in history.
Not knowing what was said about her on the altar stone, it's hard to judge, but it seems to me that her daughter should have made sure that the full interpretation was given, not just the prejudicial Henry version.
Good question. I'd have thought Elizabeth I would have
Elizabeth didn't care about any member of her family anymore than her father or grandfather did. She imprisoned her own sister in the very same tower for gods sake. Just a nobody named Mary queen of scots
I was just questioning that myself
Hi Kevin, I've only recently joined the channel. History was always my favourite subject and still is. In times when so many ignorant people are complaining and trying to effect change in the world, it appears to me they completely misunderstand the meaning of the word history! Thank you for all your efforts to keep the subject alive and interesting. I only wish we had had You Tube to accompany my schooling back in the day. many thanks
How lovely, thank you Peter 👍🏻
“The ornaments of court,” what a perfect description of courtiers. 👏🏻
Another brilliant video on an interesting subject, highlighting the complexity, and length of our history, one of the basic problems of such a rich history is keeping a track on it, thanks for doing your part in the process, education being the final part, keeping history alive😎🏹🙏
Cheers Buddy - hope you're keeping well!
Another Brilliant Video from The History Squad.
Cheers Richard!! Glad you enjoyed it 👍🏻
My word, talk about a necessary restoration! It reminds me of the “Bone Church” in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic. There they had so many bones (from my understanding) from people who died in the Black Death that an artist was commissioned to use the bones to decorate the subterranean chapel. I personally think reburying the dead a much better thing to do. Such a fascinating video! Thank you!
Greetings once again from nova Scotia, thanks again for another great video. I was totally unaware of this chapter in history, I love the way you can tell a story, please keep up the good work and as always best regards Arthur
Thank you Arthur, you're so very welcome!
The tower green’s memorial poem to the executed really is amazing. Humanizing and historical at the same time.
Thank you for the research and presentation
Keep up the good work. Love all your content.
Thanks, will do!
The guy who examined Anne Bolyn's bones should have made some reference to her having her head cut off and whether there was any evidence to that on the bones.
Exactly what I thought I also was waiting and looking forward to maybe a line drawing at least of her bones, but with so much pressure under royal orders and so many bodies skeletons to have to deal with I guess they didn't have the time nor temerity do this.
All the remains found had their heads cut off. They were all executed. It would be a bit like stating the obvious.
I'm guessing it might not have been possible. These bodies were prisoners and traitors to the crown. They wouldn't have been embalmed. Over two hundred years had passed. Decomposition would have been complete. Just lifting the box would have shifted the bones and most likely the skull would have moved within the box. Plus, weapon impacts on bone wasn't truly studied until the 1940s. He might not have known what to even look for.
How do you mean? Most buried there had been beheaded
they all have been decapitated
Really enjoyed this one 👍👍 the Knight's bones are dust, and his good sword rust - his soul is with the saints I trust.
Can't get enough of these videos.. big history buff.
I hope you gain enough traction (not that UA-cam isn't a good enough platform) to end up on a BBC history documentary. Something particularly morbid and gruesome, mind!
😜 cheers Joseph 👍🏻
Very interesting, thank you Kevin.
Another great film! Thank you!
Well done! Concise. Pleasant voice and manner. I liked this much.
The king of eery stories! Masterfully retold.
Great stuff, by the way you are looking very dapper today Kevin. Appreciate your story telling skills, informative and easy to listen to
Cheers 👍🏻
I just subscribed to your wonderful channel. I love history and I’m part British blood too. Have a great week.
Thank you & welcome. 👍🏻
I agree with you, Kevin, it is hard to believe it wasn't her. As she was found in exactly the right spot
I'm curious... was she black?!?
@@raypurchase801😂
Very well done, Kevin. It would be interesting to hear about the other remains as well.
Thank you Kevin,I agree- can we not let the dead rest- lovely video
I love history and you bring it to life again, , thank you
,
My pleasure 👍🏻
Looking very Dapper Kev mate, thanks for another great Education, of course she was set thats our belief, but again thanks for a masterful Clasd cheers...Will and Elainà🇮🇲👍🇮🇲👍🇮🇲
Cheers both 👍
Thank you, very interesting, greetings from NZ
😊🙋🏼♀️🇳🇿
I’ve been to the Tower on two separate occasions. It’s a great experience. Seeing these videos makes me wanna head back to the UK.
Us too!!
Fantastic video. Thanks a lot mate.
Glad you enjoyed it 👍🏻
Very Interesting program. I love the history of the castles
Glad you enjoyed it
Anne Boleyn is my 14th great aunt. I’m descended through her sister Mary. Great video.
Oh wow!
love this content! you're so knowledgable, it's such fun to watch you go through the secrets in these old castles and retell the stories of their former lords. can't wait for more!!
I remember watching a documentary on the tower of London ,where it was said that the place of execution on tower green was only came about in Victorian times ,for visitors who wanted to no where Anne was executed,They actually now believe that the executions took place on the parade ground
Wonderfully dark and morbid. As ever I love your content! You make history really come to life.
Thank you very much!
Not morbid very factual history!
I wished I had studied who actually was buried there before I went into the chapel... but then again, I never thought I was going to be able to, but my fiance's brother was a Beefeater, so another relative with me on the Tower tour took me there, as well as to other incredible places the general public weren't privy to.
Wow, what a treat behind the scenes - brilliant 👍🏻
Keep up the great work love the battle diagrams and figures
Cheers Peter, & thanks for your support over on Patreon too. I'm busy painting up some more figures for my next battle 👍🏻
@@thehistorysquad do a video on Frank Kitson soon
What a fascinating video!!
So very interesting. Gotta listen to this one more time!
😜 Please do!
Thanks!
Hi Chuck, thanks so much for your SuperThanks, it's very kind of you and most appreciated. 👍🏻
Fascinating as always Kevin
Great story and quotes 👏
Love the channel thank you sir.
Awesome video Kevin
Thanks for the visit 👍
Great video. 💯
No matter what else can be said about King Henry VIII, was was still one of the biggest POSs in human history.
But that was the problem he couldn't s**t, he suffered terrible constipation 😉
New Subscriber from 🇦🇺Australia,
to your Wonderful Channel.😊
Thanks for subbing! Welcome 👍🏻
I am very interested in that pouch and knife sheath combo that hangs on your hip . Happy trails
Wonderful vid Kevin has always! Thanks for another lesson of history.
Watching again, my heart really goes out to Queens Anne, Jane, Katherine, all those mostly victims of despotism. My hat goes off to the swordsman that took Queen Annes head, as I really don't think she was aware when she went to her human ending. I wish I knew his name?
It is hard to believe that a Queen's body could be so casually disposed of. Even executed Queen Consorts deserved to be treated with dignity.
Anne was anointed Queen, a Monarch. and was so in her own right. she was the last Queen of England.
But what about the bodies of executed traitors? Under the Treason Act of 1351 (long before Tudor times), both Anne Boleyn and Katharine Howard were guilty of high treason.
@@allenjenkins7947 I think most of us are aware that where his two wives were concerned, Henry V111's answer to get rid of them was to accuse them of high treason. Like Putin, you didn't oppose the King or else you were accused of high treason yourself.
@@Boogledigs Adultery by, or with, the King's wife, his unmarried daughter, or the wife of an heir to the throne were defined as high treason. The reason for this seemingly harsh definition was that it could place doubts on the legitimacy of any offspring and cloud the line of succession to the throne. Civil wars had been fought for this reason in the past.
Your channel just popped up on my home page. Funny how life works. I am an American and ever since my high school years (1970’s) I have been fascinated by the Tudors and English history in general. This video was perfect for my interests and I immediately s. Looking forward to the rest to come! Thank you. You do an awesome job of narrating.
Wow, thanks very much for your sub. I hope you get a chance to look at some of the back videos too 👍🏻
Me too, and I did my Ancestry and I am 68% British. I studied for 3 years,so great…
I have long wondered how Richard III ended up forgotten under a parking lot. Seems he was not alone in being forgotten and lost.
Yes, but it was quite simple really. The priory where Richard III was buried was sold off and demolished after the reformation and the dead were left where they lay. There's more under the car park than the king. It was the same at Bisham Abbey 👍🏻
@@thehistorysquad Wow that is so sad. You would think the Priory would say... "Oh and by the way, you remember Richard III?" but... they may have not even known at that point I suppose. Thanks for the added info!
It's even simpler than that. Richard lost. Henry Tudor won. And history is written by the victors.
The brutality of beheading a defenseless person , never ceases to repel me.
at least it was quick ( if done properly)......would you prefer to watch them starve to death or burnt alive or boiled alive. Given various options i would prefer the head coming off or if a option drowning maybe less horrific.
@@antonyjones4259 quick and painless if the execution was done properly. It took 15 wacks to see off Mary Queen of Scot’s and this was normal
Fascinating. Thank-you,
Kevin has an engaging personality and is fun to watch.
Love your show Kevin. After all this time. I felt so sad for her. Henry the eighth was just evil to his wife's. Poor things. As always your very informative. Thank you Kevin. From Ohio USA. Stay safe. Love listening to you.
Not true. He didn’t care for the cheating Ann and what she talked him into. Wasn’t his third wife loved by all and Harry never got over her?
If he was all that to you. Lol then you marry him. Just kidding. But no he was a jerk.
Great cafe at the Tower of London. Enjoyed a good lunch there once followed by a delicious chocolate cake. Just thought I’d mention that.
😜 Been there & done that, you're right, it's a great cafe 👍🏻
I spent time in St Peter's in the fall of 1984. I am empathic and can pick up emotions from places. I thought when I walked in I would feel over whelmed by the tragedies. Instead I felt a deep sense of peace and acceptance. I felt relief as if all those who had struggled and suffered were glad it was over.
That's not exactly rocket science, Helen! If I had to have my head chopped off, I'd be glad when it was over, too!
I just I have to say: Love your channel!!!! ///Lars
Thanks Lars, I appreciate it. Cheers!!
Very interesting & Thank You Very Much . I have a very long Family history in England dating back to the 11 hundreds & in 1450 I had a relative named Sir Richard Dobbs who in 1450 was Lord Mayor of London 😮 in the 15 to 16 hundreds some Family where moved to Antrim Ireland & John Dobbs built a Castle Named Dobbs My more modern relatives from England possibly came to America in the early 17 hundreds. So as my history is so very much a part of British history all your Films & Lessons are very much what I love about learning from the past. Again Thank You So Much. When I visit London I will do my own tour of Whitechapel & JTR sites my fist stop will be WhiteChaple Tube Station & Polly Nickels & Poppies Fish & Chips on Hanbury Street ❤ Cheers 🥂 Juniper & Gin ✅🍻
Excellent, and remember the Tower of London, it's a must-visit 👍🏻
Kevin Hicks looking sharp and dandy. Happy Father’s day Kev ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Cheers buddy 😉
Another engaging & well researched Vid- thankyou for that Kevin,..Did the autopsy exam of her bones confirm it was Anne, as a good examiner would or should have mentioned something about her neck bones, bit gory really but a definite positive ID ..
Very interesting and a good video.
Really interesting, thanks!
Queen Anne Boleyn, married and in love with Henry, and then destroyed in reputation as well as body. I am sure when she went to meet her Savior, her house was in order. Not so her Husband who manipulated Law and Church and sadly his own mind to pervert truth. I trust now she rests in peace, because I feel we all have peace concerning her. And she did provide the Kingdom with a most intelligent and able Queen; Elizabeth. Excellent poignant account Kevin, you did good.
Actually, really really interesting, and vividly narrated.
nice one, Kevin. Tbf, McAulay had a point- they don`t seem to have left an awful lot of detail & character in the building-from the exterior, at least.
Hi I have a question if both Mary queen of Scots and Lady Jane Grey were both still alive in 1603 and Lady Jane Grey became Elizabeth’s air and then would there have been some kind of beef between Lady Jane Grey and Mary queen of Scots just like it was with Elizabeth the 1 🤷♂️
interesting video
p.s.: it catched me while eating, was not expecting so much descriptive images.. but i am fine
Good! 😜
Looking very sharp today, Sir.
Thank you kindly 👍🏻
Poor Lady Jane Grey. I find her life's story so incredibly sad. 😢
Brilliant Kevin. You are a interesting Historian.