I remember seeing this in the theater. Sigourney Weaver is 6' tall. Seems to me they must've put her in 4" heels, then the golden headdress, then the crown atop. All I can remember is thinking she's the height of the other Queen she killed in Aliens.
A new continent filled with locally unrecognized riches. Silver and gold were perceived as metal for iconography, not commerce. Maize, tomatoes, potatoes, vanilla, cocoa and many many other things the world hadn't encountered before. Always strange to realize Italy had no concept of tomato sauce until the 1600's. 😏
LOL You're claiming Europe didn't know about gold and silver before the time of Columbus and hadn't used it for commerce? LOL Man, you REALLY need to crack open a history book, and the 7 people who upvoted this ridiculous comment.
Loved this scene. Showed this to my students. Made the Spanish students proud and their connections to Spain especially if they were Latin American especially if they were mostly Spaniard to show their roots. They were always amazed and wanted to know more. Their parents would always let them know this as well.
So funny watching the "botafumeiro" bouncing side by side in the cathedral. I didn't know The Catholic Kings met Cristopher Colombus in Santiago De Compostela 😂😂😂Very tipical in a Ridley Scott film...
The movie's biggest inaccuracy (when it comes to the Catholic Kings, not talking about Columbus himself) is that it shows Isabel, not Fernando, being the real power in the royal couple, when in fact Ferdinand was probably the most powerful monarch who had ever ruled in both Aragon and Castile, planning intricate foreign policy, while Isabel was mostly concerned with matters of faith and local Castillian governance, which is one of the main reasons she sponsore Columbus' trip and why Ferdinand was uninterested. It would not further his goals of European domination and the restoration of the Eastern Roman Empire with himself at its head... but it would allow the Catholic faith to spread to the Indies.
@@Magdalene777 (Considering this scene has taken a lot of “creative liberties”) There is an actual giant censer at the Santiago de Compostela cathedral. I believe the practice arose as a way to mask the scent of 100s of unwashed pilgrims who arrived daily at the cathedral (which was the last stop in a long pilgrimage route that people walked for days if not weeks to visit various sacred sites across western Europe)
As usual with Ridley Scott's "historical films," plenty of errors - the costumes are terrible, the music is beautiful but wrong for that period, and no, Columbus did not walk around taking Isabella by the hand. Nor did Isabella dress up like a living Infant of Prague, nor was the cloth of gold on the royal clothing cheap Lurex crap from Joann's.
Not to mention Columbus was a mass-murdering, brutal rapist piece of trash, even the people of his time thought what he and his "men" did to the natives was unusually cruel and sadistic. These kinds of movies are just historical whitewashing. The only good thing about this movie is the music, nothing else.
Thank God for the rise of Spain (and Portugal) which triggered and catapulted the rise of the West. The Ottomans and Islam were totally outflanked. Humankind was the ultimate beneficiary. With love from England.
The Four Voyages of Christopher Columbus (1492-1504)...and the Fall of Constantinople (1453). These historical events ENDED THE MIDDLE AGES in Europe which had lasted 1000 years!
That's what you were told - so you believe it - please do some actual research instead of being a mindless sock puppet, hurling your insane detachment from reality for all the world to see: fake chemical analysis, fake pottery analysis and fake handwriting analysis are not proof that ancient civilizations existed thousands of years ago - if you think it is, consider who published those reports and who owns those multi-billion dollar publishing house, then look at the historic documents that tell us the true timeline for Alexander the Great, General Ptolemy, Cleopatra, Julius Caesar, King Solomon, Nebuchadnezzar, Xerxes, Cyrus, etc. Please stop kissing the feet of liars - it's very unbecoming - especially since you make false claims about the timeline for the life of Christ.
@@michaelf7093The Hundred Years' War played a minor role in ending the Middle Ages... with the Protestant Reformation (Martin Luther in 1517) and the Renaissance playing much greater roles. There is no definite date/year when the Middle Ages in Europe ended... with the different countries and cultures transitioning to the Modern Era at different times.
Of 130 ships, only 35 sunk. Of these, your Queen 's pirates only "send to the bottom of the seas" 7, the others were lost due to the storms. The English great army of 1589 had similar losses both in men and ships, only it were not the bad weather that sunk them
NorthWestern Christian Europe is the most civilized, advanced society ever constructed and damn am I proud of being apart of that heritage. The savages will never shame me.
¡Dijo el descendiente de los anglos, aquellos que vendieron nuestra fe por el divorcio! Puede que los estadounidenses tengan todo su dinero hoy, ¡pero eso es lo que son descendientes de piratas y herejes! Sin siquiera un poco de nobleza, honor o lealtad, ¡los europeos del norte son bárbaros sin cultura! descendientes de alemanes, mientras que en el sur latino Roma era el faro de la cultura y después de la verdadera fe en el mundo, incluso en América del Sur con toda la desgracia todavía hay más valor que en los EE. UU. porque los sudamericanos hispanos y portugueses descienden de lo más alto. nobleza ibérica peninsular que supo llevar fe y cultura a los indígenas y en el norte lo que dieron aquellos traidores ingleses?
@@CitizenCan No, the burning of people was mainly in Central Europe. Enough of Black Legend against Spain, a glorious people, proud and brave. Shit of England, Holland, and theirs líes.
@@CitizenCan The most advanced and developed country of Europe. The inquisition saved many lives, on the contrary of the barbaric witch hunts and tortures inflicted over people by other European countries. You might want to study history, instead of simply propagating British propaganda. “Caused so much misery..”, indeed England caused so much misery.
@@CitizenCan 150 people condemned during a period of 300 years of Spanish rule in the Americas, all from European descent. Native Americans were exempt from any Inquisition prosecution, protected by the Hispanic Monarchy. During the Protestant Reform, in 1537, just in one year, Henry VIII ordered the Excecution of 216 Catholics...people like you usually have an amnesia attack when it comes to Protestantism, bunch of hypocrites as always, thats your intrinsic nature, hiding the truth so people see you as the righteus ones, hiding and lying is Satan's nature.
I don't think poison gases were really a thing until knowledge of chemistry was attained in the late 1700s and onwards. Trying to craft a deadly poison aerosol / smoke / gas / powder that would diffuse into a large room, without an obvious smell, potent enough to kill, but not able to produce symptoms that would give the game away first and cause the room to be cleared, like nausea, headaches, vomiting etc. It's asking a lot of people that didn't have access to the Periodic Table yet.
He always does a good job with his interpretation ! From what I could make out - he did shorten it Te Deum Laudamus, Te Dominum confitemur. Omnis Terra veneratur. Dominus.. Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus. Dominus Deus. Deus, Sanctus, Sanctus
Que ce soit 1492, Le dernier duel ou Napoléon, dans le genre "film historique" nécessitant un minimum de finesse, Scott est vraiment MAUVAIS ! Et pour 1492, Depardieu se prenait encore pour Cyrano de Bergerac, roulant ridiculement de gros yeux face aux indigènes amazoniens.
claro mucho mas probable es una Ana Bolena negra, o una Elizabeth con la dentadura perfecta y con un aspecto de 30 a sus casi 70. Isabel uso vestido hechos todos de oro y por eso uno de sus confesores le llamo la atencion y ella dijo Reina hay que serlo y tambien parecerlo...asi que te aconsejaria dejar los libritos para niños de 6 años que leiste en la escuela e investigues un poco mas
@@tla2119 Un martirio no es un sacrificio humano. El mártir elige el mismo sufrir para expiar los pecados de la Humanidad. Los sacrificios en las religiones precolombinas que los practicaban eran más como un tributo de sangre para saciar a unos dioses que podían acabar con ellos. El martirio nace del amor, el sacrificio del miedo.
I don't know what you are referring to as "craziness" but if you mean conflict and war and indiscriminate killing, you need to read a few history books. That had been going on for thousands of years before and for quite a bit longer than 200 years after 1492. As for "toilet bowl of history", empires rise and fall. There is no such thing as a "toilet bowl of history", merely ebbs and flows of power. Spain had a history before 1492 and continues to have one to this very day.
Okay - a less hyperbolic version of what was said: this was the beginning of colonialism which initially helped Spain a lot in the form of silver and gold bullion which allowed it to start focusing its efforts to become stronger in Italy and Germany when the crowns of Spain, the Netherlands and the Holy Roman Empires merged under Charles V. The problem was this set Spain up into an imperial position that its economy wasn't able to sustain; at one point the state's income was committed for 16 years due to their military budget not keeping in line with their tax receipts and the empire had to go bankrupt. The main tax base they had was the kingdom of Castille which the monarchs had the most direct ability to increase taxes on but which was the poorest area they owned. The money that came from its colonies ultimately disappeared into the hands of Italian financiers and made a significant contribution to the price revolution that hit its peak in the 1600s where food became unaffordable for many. What looks like a significant benefit for Spain in them claiming central and south America didn't take them past the 1700s, when their defeat in the 7 years war made clear that they were no longer the power that they had been for the previous 2 centuries. Ultimately the structural failure of their economy - with focus on war and expansion and not on industrialising - led the to falling behind the other major European powers who were focusing more on trade.
I remember seeing this in the theater. Sigourney Weaver is 6' tall. Seems to me they must've put her in 4" heels, then the golden headdress, then the crown atop. All I can remember is thinking she's the height of the other Queen she killed in Aliens.
The best part is, on close inspection of the foot design, it looks like the Alien Queen is wearing heels too 🤣
@@無教会内村
high heel sexiness is inter-species i guess LOL
A new continent filled with locally unrecognized riches. Silver and gold were perceived as metal for iconography, not commerce. Maize, tomatoes, potatoes, vanilla, cocoa and many many other things the world hadn't encountered before. Always strange to realize Italy had no concept of tomato sauce until the 1600's. 😏
LOL You're claiming Europe didn't know about gold and silver before the time of Columbus and hadn't used it for commerce? LOL Man, you REALLY need to crack open a history book, and the 7 people who upvoted this ridiculous comment.
Yep, you just had to rape the new world to get them and then drag my ancestors in chains across the ocean to maintain the system.
You do realize the Americas had existed before Europeans sailed to it from the Iberian peninsula.
In the Point of view of the Old World it is a new Continent, Whose development is separate to Eurasia and Africa soon would clash.
@@lettuceman9439 In the point of view of some in the old world, particularly those trying to validate new territorial claims.
Loved this scene. Showed this to my students. Made the Spanish students proud and their connections to Spain especially if they were Latin American especially if they were mostly Spaniard to show their roots. They were always amazed and wanted to know more. Their parents would always let them know this as well.
So funny watching the "botafumeiro" bouncing side by side in the cathedral. I didn't know The Catholic Kings met Cristopher Colombus in Santiago De Compostela 😂😂😂Very tipical in a Ridley Scott film...
It's a movie. Chill bro. All sorts of backgrounds are used.
Many other cathedrals at this time had a swinging thurible. Most of them are gone now.
Many other cathedrals at this time had a swinging thurible. Most of them are gone now.
The movie's biggest inaccuracy (when it comes to the Catholic Kings, not talking about Columbus himself) is that it shows Isabel, not Fernando, being the real power in the royal couple, when in fact Ferdinand was probably the most powerful monarch who had ever ruled in both Aragon and Castile, planning intricate foreign policy, while Isabel was mostly concerned with matters of faith and local Castillian governance, which is one of the main reasons she sponsore Columbus' trip and why Ferdinand was uninterested. It would not further his goals of European domination and the restoration of the Eastern Roman Empire with himself at its head... but it would allow the Catholic faith to spread to the Indies.
Eso no es Santiago, para empezar…
This entire scene looks like a painting.
That's got to be the most gargantuan censer I've ever seen! It must have been choking to be in attendance there!
hmm could be camera angles to make it look bigger than it actually yes
Check out botafumeiro. It’s a real thing 🤩
People didn't bathe or wear deodorant so it probably provided relief from how bad everyone smelled.
@@Magdalene777 (Considering this scene has taken a lot of “creative liberties”) There is an actual giant censer at the Santiago de Compostela cathedral. I believe the practice arose as a way to mask the scent of 100s of unwashed pilgrims who arrived daily at the cathedral (which was the last stop in a long pilgrimage route that people walked for days if not weeks to visit various sacred sites across western Europe)
As usual with Ridley Scott's "historical films," plenty of errors - the costumes are terrible, the music is beautiful but wrong for that period, and no, Columbus did not walk around taking Isabella by the hand. Nor did Isabella dress up like a living Infant of Prague, nor was the cloth of gold on the royal clothing cheap Lurex crap from Joann's.
Not to mention Columbus was a mass-murdering, brutal rapist piece of trash, even the people of his time thought what he and his "men" did to the natives was unusually cruel and sadistic. These kinds of movies are just historical whitewashing. The only good thing about this movie is the music, nothing else.
Could have been worse, like a big room with a terrible illumination, no life, dirty and sound of someone dying in the background
But as usual a beautiful film.
@@eduardo.d It could also have been correct :)
...Who hurt you? 😂
1492: The Conquest of Paradise.
It looks like the Mercury space capsule swinging from above.
There is one like that in Restoration.
God • Gold • Glory
Don't forget Inquisition....
And the blood
@@CitizenCan Impossible, thanks to Monty Python
@@tla2119 Yes, horrible how the Aztecs ripped out the heart live...
horrible how the christians practised cannibalism and mass murder@@angelcamachodelsolar
Amazing costume design!!!
But wrong😂
Awful, really awful. Both side: as history, so as from the point of taste.
Beautiful and Majestic
The best looking actor in French cinema History !👀👀🙄🙄💩💩🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Majestic film. Ridley does it well.
Oh shit. Ripley is the Queen of Spain!?!
She's Isabel de Castilla!!! Now be on your knees you pagan!!
Yes! Best queen ever.
Ripley - she protec, she attac, she queen of Spain
Thank God for the rise of Spain (and Portugal) which triggered and catapulted the rise of the West. The Ottomans and Islam were totally outflanked. Humankind was the ultimate beneficiary. With love from England.
The Four Voyages of Christopher Columbus (1492-1504)...and the Fall of Constantinople (1453). These historical events ENDED THE MIDDLE AGES in Europe which had lasted 1000 years!
That's what you were told - so you believe it - please do some actual research instead of being a mindless sock puppet, hurling your insane detachment from reality for all the world to see: fake chemical analysis, fake pottery analysis and fake handwriting analysis are not proof that ancient civilizations existed thousands of years ago - if you think it is, consider who published those reports and who owns those multi-billion dollar publishing house, then look at the historic documents that tell us the true timeline for Alexander the Great, General Ptolemy, Cleopatra, Julius Caesar, King Solomon, Nebuchadnezzar, Xerxes, Cyrus, etc.
Please stop kissing the feet of liars - it's very unbecoming - especially since you make false claims about the timeline for the life of Christ.
The end of the Hundred Years War also helped.
@@michaelf7093The Hundred Years' War played a minor role in ending the Middle Ages... with the Protestant Reformation (Martin Luther in 1517) and the Renaissance playing much greater roles. There is no definite date/year when the Middle Ages in Europe ended... with the different countries and cultures transitioning to the Modern Era at different times.
If only the Spaniards were this glorious today.
Hispania victrix 🇪🇸
This Ceremony looks Amazing🤔🤔🤔
Me encanta el sonido de las Campanas al principio
Truly amazing scene and music 👏 the esence of Spain's might and Glory ❤️🔥
Former. Before King Philip cut down the forests of Spain, only to have Queen Elizabeth's navy send those trees to the bottom of the sea.
Wow Brits and their Queens 😃 🇬🇧 Glorius and Victorius huh
Of 130 ships, only 35 sunk. Of these, your Queen 's pirates only "send to the bottom of the seas" 7, the others were lost due to the storms. The English great army of 1589 had similar losses both in men and ships, only it were not the bad weather that sunk them
Yup you guys and the British have a few things in common. Forgotten empires and sore losers.@@orestilamadaseva3936
Listen to that music!!!!
NorthWestern Christian Europe is the most civilized, advanced society ever constructed and damn am I proud of being apart of that heritage. The savages will never shame me.
¡Dijo el descendiente de los anglos, aquellos que vendieron nuestra fe por el divorcio! Puede que los estadounidenses tengan todo su dinero hoy, ¡pero eso es lo que son descendientes de piratas y herejes! Sin siquiera un poco de nobleza, honor o lealtad, ¡los europeos del norte son bárbaros sin cultura! descendientes de alemanes, mientras que en el sur latino Roma era el faro de la cultura y después de la verdadera fe en el mundo, incluso en América del Sur con toda la desgracia todavía hay más valor que en los EE. UU. porque los sudamericanos hispanos y portugueses descienden de lo más alto. nobleza ibérica peninsular que supo llevar fe y cultura a los indígenas y en el norte lo que dieron aquellos traidores ingleses?
So, whose chest is going to burst with the alien coming out of it?
That’s a good one!😂😂😂😂
Well their name won't end in a vowel and there won't be a baby alien. But burst one must. I'm pretty certain of that.
Weaver and Depardieu.
Eternal Glory to Spain.
The country which established the Inquisition and caused so much misery throughout history...
@@CitizenCan No, the burning of people was mainly in Central Europe. Enough of Black Legend against Spain, a glorious people, proud and brave. Shit of England, Holland, and theirs líes.
@@CitizenCan The most advanced and developed country of Europe.
The inquisition saved many lives, on the contrary of the barbaric witch hunts and tortures inflicted over people by other European countries. You might want to study history, instead of simply propagating British propaganda.
“Caused so much misery..”, indeed England caused so much misery.
@@CitizenCan 150 people condemned during a period of 300 years of Spanish rule in the Americas, all from European descent. Native Americans were exempt from any Inquisition prosecution, protected by the Hispanic Monarchy. During the Protestant Reform, in 1537, just in one year, Henry VIII ordered the Excecution of 216 Catholics...people like you usually have an amnesia attack when it comes to Protestantism, bunch of hypocrites as always, thats your intrinsic nature, hiding the truth so people see you as the righteus ones, hiding and lying is Satan's nature.
@@CitizenCan Spain was not the country which established the Inquisition, sir. There're another countries in Europe which did it before Spain.
Is it streaming somewhere? Netflix? AMazon? Hulu? I would love to see it.
search youtube "1492"
Torrent is streaming anytime.
and the FBI is open 24 hours. any other bright ideas?@@insanidadeEspelhada
Sigourney Weaver makes a good queen!
I wish i knew the ost !
ua-cam.com/video/JrhRkrnPuB4/v-deo.htmlsi=3be1SHGvw7es6Gbz
Vangelis , same guy who did Chariots of fire
Indeed. Vangelis '1492: Conquest of Paradise'
It's highly recommended to check out that Vangelis album. Beautiful, majestic music, and very unlike anything else you hear.
@@YankeesFan0620 And Blade Runner. ;)
I wonder if anyone ever poisoned the incense. You coud take out the rulers of an empire....
Maybe they had incense sniffers as they had food tasters. You can never be too careful.
I don't think poison gases were really a thing until knowledge of chemistry was attained in the late 1700s and onwards.
Trying to craft a deadly poison aerosol / smoke / gas / powder that would diffuse into a large room, without an obvious smell, potent enough to kill, but not able to produce symptoms that would give the game away first and cause the room to be cleared, like nausea, headaches, vomiting etc.
It's asking a lot of people that didn't have access to the Periodic Table yet.
Alchemy was commonly used in the 1300', 1400's, 1500's ... Rich women were getting their hair "bleached" to become blondes - poisons were also common.
A portuguese sailor made Isabel the most important woman in the History of Europe!!!
portuguese???....probabely Colon was jew, by the way isabella was half portuguese
What is the name of the song the choir is singing in the background it’s pretty
This music is not in the soundtrack or featured in the end credits. I think it's music by Vangelis. This music is enchanting.
Te Deum Laudamus
ua-cam.com/video/JrhRkrnPuB4/v-deo.htmlsi=3be1SHGvw7es6Gbz
Might be Vangelis own interpretation of Te Deum Laudamus
He always does a good job with his interpretation !
From what I could make out - he did shorten it
Te Deum Laudamus, Te Dominum confitemur. Omnis Terra veneratur. Dominus..
Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus. Dominus Deus. Deus, Sanctus, Sanctus
If this looks grand…imagine what glittering Constantinople would have looked like.
Or Atlantis!
Llena de mezquitas y turcos, y mas turcos.
Ya dije turcos?
Better watch out of any crabs you see out there
🦀
Que ce soit 1492, Le dernier duel ou Napoléon, dans le genre "film historique" nécessitant un minimum de finesse, Scott est vraiment MAUVAIS !
Et pour 1492, Depardieu se prenait encore pour Cyrano de Bergerac, roulant ridiculement de gros yeux face aux indigènes amazoniens.
Así es que en la Corte castellana hablaban inglés.
what is the film name
1492 Conquest of Paradise.
Unos improbables Reyes Catolicos
Por qué?
@@monmothma3358 por tan aparatosos trajes que no se corresponden con la época; vamos, por ninguna época.
claro mucho mas probable es una Ana Bolena negra, o una Elizabeth con la dentadura perfecta y con un aspecto de 30 a sus casi 70. Isabel uso vestido hechos todos de oro y por eso uno de sus confesores le llamo la atencion y ella dijo Reina hay que serlo y tambien parecerlo...asi que te aconsejaria dejar los libritos para niños de 6 años que leiste en la escuela e investigues un poco mas
@@astrofabio68 Da la casualidad que los libros que leo no son tan simples
The real queen was better.
He did not discover the north America but was the first white to discover the Bahamas archipelago
The Bahamas is part of North America and hence, the Americas as a whole.
Как называется фильм ?
(conquest of paradise)
What’s the name of this film?
1492: Conquest of paradise. Directed by Ridley Scott, Music Soundtrack: Vangelis, Starring: Gerard Depardieu, Sigourney Weaver and Armand Assante!👍
It's a Christopher Columbus film
Where can we find the film?
ua-cam.com/video/1TZsYliI2z4/v-deo.html&pp=ygUPMTQ5MiBmdWxsIG1vdmll@@francismcdonnell753
1492 Conquest of Paradise. Soundtrack composed by Vangelis. ✨
Великий дон Христофор
People have no earthly idea that these huge ancient magnificent buildings were from the 1000 years AGE OF CHRIST.
What makes you think no-one knows?
And in the not age of christ we made much bigger buildings. Whats your point? Society grows?
And this Christian brought death and ruin to the Bahamas. Rejoice !
@@HansWurst1569Those buildings are ugly af
@@rayzas4885 its subjective so not really a good argument…
Stop canibalism and humans sacrifices guys...
You must be talking about all the Satanists in Europe. I agree, they need to stop.
Isn’t that what Christianity is about, a human sacrifice
@@tla2119 Un martirio no es un sacrificio humano. El mártir elige el mismo sufrir para expiar los pecados de la Humanidad.
Los sacrificios en las religiones precolombinas que los practicaban eran más como un tributo de sangre para saciar a unos dioses que podían acabar con ellos.
El martirio nace del amor, el sacrificio del miedo.
😂 they love doing these exaggerated representations of undocumented detailed historical events!
Why is it like in blasphemous game universe... its not like in spain
Looks like the "running of the fools".
What movie is this?
Read the comments.
Why can’t you just be a decent human being?@@SR-iy4gg
Hello Austin, the movie is called ‘1492: Conquest of Paradise’.
@@ah7910 thank you very much! I couldn't find it in Google search.
Walking playing cards??
You must be american
All for a guy who got lost.
Isn’t traveling a wonderful thing? 😊
PLVS VLTRA
Как название этого фильма?
and shortly after everyone turned on spain lol
or more specifically, they got a habsburg king that made a mess of the kingdom and antagonized everyone
Вот дон Христофор славу увидел
Otra mierda de pelicula dirigida por un inglés que destroza la historia
👑🇪🇸🏰💎💐💍💖
The beginning of 200 years of craziness, ending with Spain in the toiletbowl of history.
I suppose your sources about the Spanish Empire are as objective and scientific as those of Himmler about the jewish people...
Calla hispanofobo
I believe you can sue your school for negligence, they neglect you indeed, so sad.
I don't know what you are referring to as "craziness" but if you mean conflict and war and indiscriminate killing, you need to read a few history books. That had been going on for thousands of years before and for quite a bit longer than 200 years after 1492. As for "toilet bowl of history", empires rise and fall. There is no such thing as a "toilet bowl of history", merely ebbs and flows of power. Spain had a history before 1492 and continues to have one to this very day.
Okay - a less hyperbolic version of what was said: this was the beginning of colonialism which initially helped Spain a lot in the form of silver and gold bullion which allowed it to start focusing its efforts to become stronger in Italy and Germany when the crowns of Spain, the Netherlands and the Holy Roman Empires merged under Charles V. The problem was this set Spain up into an imperial position that its economy wasn't able to sustain; at one point the state's income was committed for 16 years due to their military budget not keeping in line with their tax receipts and the empire had to go bankrupt. The main tax base they had was the kingdom of Castille which the monarchs had the most direct ability to increase taxes on but which was the poorest area they owned. The money that came from its colonies ultimately disappeared into the hands of Italian financiers and made a significant contribution to the price revolution that hit its peak in the 1600s where food became unaffordable for many. What looks like a significant benefit for Spain in them claiming central and south America didn't take them past the 1700s, when their defeat in the 7 years war made clear that they were no longer the power that they had been for the previous 2 centuries. Ultimately the structural failure of their economy - with focus on war and expansion and not on industrialising - led the to falling behind the other major European powers who were focusing more on trade.
Wasn't Isabella trans? Why did they leave that part of history out?
becasue she was also black like Anna Bolena
Coz this movie was made in 1992
No, no, you're confusing Isabella with Elizabeth.
And @astrofabio68 is right, they were both black.
Because she actually was a Communist black lesbian woman with tatoos all over her body.
No, no. You are both confused. That was Eleanor of Aquitaine. That is why they cast "Katherine" Hepburn.
What movie is this??
1492 conquista del paraíso
Which movie is this?
1492 conquest of paradise
What movie is this?
1492 The Conquest of Paradise
Blasphemous: Origins.