Women Who Made History

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  • Опубліковано 2 січ 2025

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  • @OverlySarcasticProductions
    @OverlySarcasticProductions  2 роки тому +524

    Get the History-Makers deck HERE:
    www.kickstarter.com/projects/zachwahls/the-woman-cards-history-makers
    -B

  • @oracleofcheese
    @oracleofcheese 2 роки тому +5486

    Speaking of the long game, I would like to point out to the audience that not only did Eleanor of Aquitaine outlive both her husband and 4 out of 5 of her sons, she lived till she was 80. IN THE 13TH BLOODY CENTURY

    • @BirdPeopleArentReal
      @BirdPeopleArentReal 2 роки тому +209

      I freaking love Eleanor of Aquitaine, I’m so happy they covered her

    • @potatomasterstudios761
      @potatomasterstudios761 2 роки тому +7

      @@BirdPeopleArentReal WHAT!!!!!

    • @snowyowl235
      @snowyowl235 2 роки тому +67

      What a legend

    • @jerkel
      @jerkel 2 роки тому +126

      and participating in a crusade! that women lived life on her terms

    • @realmart3451
      @realmart3451 2 роки тому +6

      @@potatomasterstudios761 what

  • @asprinjuice425
    @asprinjuice425 2 роки тому +2046

    I really appreciate this channel's efforts to ensure that Cleopatra isn't just remembered for beauty or incest or whatever, but for being a seriously powerful and intelligent woman of her time.

    • @majesticed9329
      @majesticed9329 2 роки тому +79

      Unfortunately she was against Augustus, had she been against a lesser roman ruler and not the best one she might have survived for longer

    • @atticusp6592
      @atticusp6592 2 роки тому +41

      Despite the problems I do have with her that is a fair point, if you're going to lose to anybody you will lose to Augustus. He even ran Egypt better than her and turned it into one of the most profitable provinces in the Empire

    • @franzluggin398
      @franzluggin398 2 роки тому +80

      @@atticusp6592 Extracting more income out of a province doesn't necessarily mean running it better. Cleopatra clearly was more present and more personally active in Egypt, periodically travelling up the Nile to strengthen local support, whereas Augustus and his governors were mostly just present in and around Alexandria, maybe as far south as where Cairo lies today. And in terms of finances, it is totally possible that Cleopatra's plan was to extract less wealth out of her realm now in order to allow more growth in the region, as a sort of investment into the future.

    • @polasamierwahsh421
      @polasamierwahsh421 2 роки тому +4

      Also for turning the fall of a dynasty into a rebirth

    • @atticusp6592
      @atticusp6592 2 роки тому +7

      @@franzluggin398 You mean by how Augustus improved it's infrastructure and promoted trade? That and it didn't hurt that it's rulers didn't need to rely on foreign support to have any semblance of stability. Whatever Cleopatra had planned doesn't really matter in the face of what Augustus actually did. To her credit she was arguably among the most competent members of her dynasty and the situation she inherited was not especially desirable but I cannot help but think that she could have made better use of her time, instead of drinking pearls in wine she could have improved the running of her Kingdom.

  • @Dee-jp7ek
    @Dee-jp7ek 2 роки тому +2972

    "I'm retiring. You're welcome" Has to be the biggest flex of any criminal in history.

    • @dragonfell5078
      @dragonfell5078 2 роки тому +125

      Yeah she totally exposed the gaping holes in the Qing's naval defenses. If they had taken that opportunity to correct their mistakes (maybe even hire her to teach their navy), maybe the British would've had a harder time

    • @hehe3301
      @hehe3301 2 роки тому +49

      She was the rose, the bloody rose, the bloody rose of china

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw 2 роки тому +8

      @@dragonfell5078 they wouldn't have that hard a time, the brits had one of the best land armies which could easily defeat the qing even without naval support

    • @kyuven
      @kyuven 2 роки тому +47

      @@Cecilia-ky3uw they did but the british didnt have logistics on their side. it was only because of the sheer ineptitude and technological gap wider than the grand canyon (brought on entirely by chinese hubris) that let the british go ham.
      contrast the Zulus or hell the native americans, who gave the british a hard time even with an even larger tech gap just because they werent led by incompetents.
      contrast japan, which took one look at the absolute reaming the brits gave to china, looked at the bunch of american ships in tokyo bay, and instantly said "we are going to modernize the SHIT out of our society" and rose to become one of the only true modern era asian colonial powers.
      and since china REALLY sucks at learning from their own history, they AGAIN got pantsed by a foreign power (this time japan).
      literally the only thing that was keeping the us and russia from carving china up like a christmas ham after WW2 was that the country was SO fucked up no one had the stamina to deal with it.
      it's even why MacArthur ended up getting fired when he thought to try to invade China.
      china has beautiful art and culture, a robust history, and some of the shittiest government policies in human history.

    • @dragonfell5078
      @dragonfell5078 2 роки тому +11

      @@kyuven The only true mistake is the one where nothing is learned.
      So China boutta get slapped by their asian parents because THEY A FAILYAH
      jokes aside, china is beautiful, but their government would be outclassed by fucking Mordor and it's depressing. China is whole again... THEN IT BROKE AGAIN

  • @taylorjoseph15
    @taylorjoseph15 2 роки тому +681

    My spouse told me the story of the Trung sisters of Vietnam.
    Similar to Boudica, they were under brutal Chinese rule until they revolted and took the territory back. The elder sister ruled for two years until a significant army was mustered by China and retook Vietnam.
    Some accounts say they committed suicide after their defeat, others say they were captured and beheaded.
    But the story lives on and there is a statue of them to this day.

    • @1953Johnnyp
      @1953Johnnyp 2 роки тому +1

      Are there heads on the statues?

    • @octapusxft
      @octapusxft 2 роки тому +1

      Oh yeah saw a video about them somewhere on YT in the past

    • @destroyraiden
      @destroyraiden 2 роки тому +19

      The whole lot was actually really awesome not just the sisters once they took power their main female general was years a head of them she fled to the mountains and already had a sizable army training to take on China itself by the time the one sister became queen and both of them decided to get back at China. Their General was hardcore but what is also unique is that they had 37 female generals for the entire affair it's the most recorded female generalship ever recorded.
      When China finally bared down on them after a prolonged years of battles the hardcore female general gave birth during this final battle she'd not stopped fighting her whole pregnancy and decided why give up now? She strapped the baby to her chest and went into the fray
      no one knows if the sisters died, committed suicide, drowned in a river crossing, ran off as they were not amongst the dead recorded but the whole affair should be many movies like we keep getting spammed on D-day IMO so many many women to follow perspective wise you'd be able to really keep remakes fresh.
      but I guess that's the point Hollywood doesn't want to follow women in battle perspectives often they think like they thought in the civil war if women are seen doing combat and talked about positively or shown doing their brave deeds women will get it in their heads to fight too that's an actually thing they said during the civil war hence the shamming of any ousted women in battle.

    • @cosmopeaches2604
      @cosmopeaches2604 2 роки тому +5

      @@octapusxft Epimetheus did a great video on the Trung Sisters rebellion, might be the one you're thinking of.

    • @chaook
      @chaook 2 роки тому +1

      The elder sister's husband was also captured and use by the army of Chinese at that time which was the Han Dynasty's to force a surrender from her. She did not faze.
      A weird, odd and somewhat apocryphal detail is that they lose to Chinese male soldiers who fought naked or sth. Weird point but kinda iconic.

  • @inteligentidiot7233
    @inteligentidiot7233 2 роки тому +1385

    Red really outdid herself with the character drawings this time. Seriously love Tomoe's chill expression.

    • @zenebean
      @zenebean 2 роки тому +32

      I love Boudica's look of absolute rage

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 2 роки тому +1

      Man, the Witch-Hunt-Persectution of innocent Russian People is f-ing Disgusting.
      America at it’s Worst.
      Seen Some More News newest video? The One about Ukraine?
      It covers people being so f-ing stupid they pee on maybe-but-not-actually-russian People’s doormats cause being petty is not cringey-as-f-ck, apparently, but actually ‚cool’.
      Even if the guy who didnt deserve it cause being Russian isnt evil ISNT EVEN RUSSIAN ANYWAY.
      If you have 0 Endurance, then watch just the part of the video covering the thing I just ranted-about: Minute 34-38.

  • @acecat2798
    @acecat2798 2 роки тому +439

    To people talking at Blue for forgetting someone awesome- please remember he's just doing intros for the people included in the cards, and probably didn't choose the deck. Though, you know, please keep listing awesome women in the comments so we can all go read up on them more because this was never going to be enough and that's okay.

    • @als3022
      @als3022 2 роки тому +34

      From what I saw it was more people sharing rather than overt anger or anything. I added Isabella I of Castile and Margaret Beaufort.

    • @TheMindofRa
      @TheMindofRa 2 роки тому +12

      ok well I'm gonna drop one of the more obvious choices and say Queen Elisabeth the 1st of England

    • @gracehiggins2666
      @gracehiggins2666 2 роки тому +11

      Actually, Blue said in the podcast that he did pick which women appeared in the deck. Though, he also said he didn't pick any women that already appeared in the 3 previous decks The Women Cards have made.

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 2 роки тому +6

      Plus, decks have limits.

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 2 роки тому

      @@als3022 Isabella I of Castile ?

  • @michaelscott6022
    @michaelscott6022 2 роки тому +2141

    There's a legend/account of a woman in Jamaica, Nana of the Mountains(?), (can't quite remember her name, if she ever had one), from the 16, 1700's-ish I think, who fought British imperialism and freed slaves from the plantations, and was so terrifying and so successful that _to this day,_ the mountain region she claimed and controlled as a safe haven for runaway slaves is treated as its own sovereign territory by Jamaican and international law.

    • @yolddelius6292
      @yolddelius6292 2 роки тому +87

      i wasthinking of queen nanny too

    • @AxxLAfriku
      @AxxLAfriku 2 роки тому +4

      I am the most famous man on YouTub! This is not bragging! This is the truth! The truth will set you free, dear mike

    • @kennybrightwell1877
      @kennybrightwell1877 2 роки тому +92

      While I’m sure this is just fantastical hearsay, but according to legend Grandy Nanny could catch bullets and canon fire, so the British army crafted a silver canon ball just for her and fired.
      She catches the thing in her teeth, and decides to keep it as a souvenir.

    • @Jamie-A
      @Jamie-A 2 роки тому +228

      hi, Jamaican here, that would be Nanny of the Maroons! and she's not a legend, she was a very real person, and recognized as a National Heroine of Jamaica. she was a war general, and excelled at guerilla warfare, giving the British the run around for years upon years. The area she claimed is called Accompong, and is one of 4 Maroon Towns on the island.

    • @kennybrightwell1877
      @kennybrightwell1877 2 роки тому +95

      @@Jamie-A My mistake, I’m sorry. I did not mean to imply that Grandy Nanny was a myth. I meant to say that her ability to catch cannonballs and bullets might have been slightly exaggerated.

  • @more_beans29
    @more_beans29 2 роки тому +877

    Another notable female historical figure is Gráinne Mhaol, pirate queen of Ireland! She's got quite the story :)

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz 2 роки тому +35

      I was hoping for her too, as she is family

    • @theemeraldboars484
      @theemeraldboars484 2 роки тому +11

      Knew I forgot someone

    • @ThingsStuffington
      @ThingsStuffington 2 роки тому +14

      Daughter of the Dun, terror of the west~

    • @theemeraldboars484
      @theemeraldboars484 2 роки тому +25

      @@ThingsStuffington sailed the coast of Ireland, with O'Malley on her crest!

    • @mysticsight5200
      @mysticsight5200 2 роки тому +4

      I was waiting for Margrete 1 from denmark

  • @jjthejetplane23571
    @jjthejetplane23571 2 роки тому +274

    I love Hildegard von Bingen and I’ve been lucky enough to perform her music in cathedrals a couple times! My favorite bit about her is that men at the time were so confused as to how she could possibly be smarter than all of them, that they concluded she just had to have been given divine abilities directly from God!

    • @MrHodoAstartes
      @MrHodoAstartes 2 роки тому +25

      Well, all abilities would have been viewed as ultimately divine favor as all flowed from God.
      But she was very much an integrated part of the medieval systems of power as abbess, and as such not easily ignored or dismissed.
      And her mountains of correspondence show us that she was respected by very powerful men, even if she routinely sassed them. I guess being challenged in a letter doesn't carry the same threat as public chastisement.
      And hard words from a famously pious polymath likely go down better than some upstart monk who suddenly shakes the foundations of Catholicism.

  • @alehaim
    @alehaim 2 роки тому +501

    It's criminal to forget St Olga of the Kievan Rus. She became a regent of the Kievan Rus and basically was a bad add and brutal regent leader of the Kievan Rus and even after her regency she kept great power as I remember

    • @ethanmacleod1721
      @ethanmacleod1721 2 роки тому +55

      Pardon my ignorance, was that the lady in the story of burning a village down with a bird from each home?

    • @rosscalhoun3389
      @rosscalhoun3389 2 роки тому +40

      @@ethanmacleod1721 That would be her, yes.

    • @silverloony1170
      @silverloony1170 2 роки тому +30

      I looked up the story about the birds. Holy. S***. That's terrifying.

    • @crypticmrchimes
      @crypticmrchimes 2 роки тому +35

      Also, if memory serves me right, she was also instrumental in introducing Christianity to the region, hence why she was canonized by the Orthodox Church.

    • @fiendish9474
      @fiendish9474 2 роки тому +7

      Quite possibly my favorite Saint, maybe ever.

  • @oracleofcheese
    @oracleofcheese 2 роки тому +477

    Seriously, both my girl Hildegard von Bingen and the utter QUEEN that was Eleanor of Aquitaine in one video?! Today is an excellent day.

    • @Mat_Rural
      @Mat_Rural 2 роки тому +17

      If you like Eleanor, I recommend the film The Lion in Winter (assuming you haven't seen it already), where she is stunningly played by Katharine Hepburn; a role for which she deservingly won an Academy Award.

    • @palomalandazuri6100
      @palomalandazuri6100 2 роки тому +1

      I was thinking the same thing ❤️

    • @edisonlima4647
      @edisonlima4647 2 роки тому +2

      @@Mat_Rural Mentioning "The Lion in Winter"???
      You are now, officially, my best friend!
      That film is ENDLESSLY quotable!!!!

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 2 роки тому +1

      Man, the Witch-Hunt-Persectution of innocent Russian People is f-ing Disgusting.
      America at it’s Worst.
      Seen Some More News newest video? The One about Ukraine?
      It covers people being so f-ing stupid they pee on maybe-but-not-actually-russian People’s doormats cause being petty is not cringey-as-f-ck, apparently, but actually ‚cool’.
      Even if the guy who didnt deserve it cause being Russian isnt evil ISNT EVEN RUSSIAN ANYWAY.

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin 2 роки тому

      And I'm ashamed I don't know much about her, beyond the very excellent Bardcore musician, who takes her name from her

  • @alexandrapedersen829
    @alexandrapedersen829 2 роки тому +133

    A very notable woman from my country's history is Queen Margrethe of Denmark, Norway and Sweden who not only managed to become queen regnant in three countries where this wasn't legally possible but also founded a union between them which lasted for more than a century.

  • @FanOfMostEverything
    @FanOfMostEverything 2 роки тому +359

    I picked the female avatar in Pokémon Shield for her hat-it's a good hat!-and named her Boudica. When I got all but crowned queen in the postgame, it felt like a lovely bit of postmortem vengeance for her namesake.

    • @snowyowl235
      @snowyowl235 2 роки тому +7

      The girl is supposed to be Scottish right?

    • @FanOfMostEverything
      @FanOfMostEverything 2 роки тому +13

      @@snowyowl235 Ostensibly.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter 2 роки тому +5

      Boudica's husband had only been allowed to remain king because he had agreed with the Romans when they invaded that he would be the last of his line and not cause any trouble. His will was in direct contradiction to that agreement to collaborate with the new regime. Also, when you want to throw an ultimatum at the Roman Emperor, first check whether it is Nero. Boudica could have retired a rich and influential Roman citizen. She preferred to make demands that any politically savvy British chief would know would bring retribution. Then she tortured and killed many ordinary people who were doing the same that she had as a Roman citizen for two decades but they had vastly less money. Boudica was a very successful war criminal, she slaughtered many, many more civilians than soldiers. She became a symbolic hero of noble British resistance to the British Empire when the Victorians got sentimental about British history. Caractacus was a better example of a king and rebel warrior, who gave us the nucleus of the myth of King Arthur.

    • @FanOfMostEverything
      @FanOfMostEverything 2 роки тому +15

      @@pattheplanter I mean, fair enough, but I feel like that comment would work better on its own rather than a reply to how I fell prey to the siren song of a tam o' shanter.

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter 2 роки тому +7

      @@FanOfMostEverything There are 919 comments already, I felt my comment would work better by parasitising the popularity of yours. Sorry. The hat love was an innocent victim. The concept of Boudica needing any more vengeance than she already took from innocent bystanders seemed strange to me, when you know the full story.

  • @Just_Some_Guy_with_a_Mustache
    @Just_Some_Guy_with_a_Mustache 2 роки тому +674

    *People who play Fate:* "You know, I'm something of an expert on powerful historical women myself."
    *Blue:* "Oh?"
    "Yeah. Like Tomoe Gozen."
    *Blue:* "Nice."
    "Zenobia..."
    *Blue:* "Sweet."
    "Cleopatra..."
    *Blue:* "Of course."
    "Francis Drake..."
    *Blue:* "What?"
    "King Arthur..."
    *Blue:* "No."
    "Ushiwakamaru..."
    *Blue:* "Stop."
    "Nero Claudius..."
    *Blue:* "That is so wrong on so many levels..."

    • @IliyaMoroumetz
      @IliyaMoroumetz 2 роки тому +126

      I'm of two minds on that;, it'd have been cool if they all were women, but to the degree they've been sexualized in the game is kind of offputting. Just saying.

    • @jasperjavillo686
      @jasperjavillo686 2 роки тому +37

      They aren’t all that bad. Tomoe for example leans more towards the moe in her name by being depicted as a cute gamer girl in her off time.

    • @chelvo56
      @chelvo56 2 роки тому +32

      @@IliyaMoroumetz Insert rant about how they ruined Nero, which was wonderfully written in Fate//Extra, here

    • @HistoryisBoss
      @HistoryisBoss 2 роки тому +8

      Literally thinking the same thing.

    • @slimetank394
      @slimetank394 2 роки тому +24

      All these amazing women in history and fate just jump straight to turning half of the men into women, or "trap", or some kind of literal nonsense of sex/gender that for some reasons looks like women

  • @kylewilliams3031
    @kylewilliams3031 2 роки тому +173

    Some other great women from history:
    Khutulun - Mongol Empire
    Lozen - Apache
    Olga of Kiev - Kievan Rus
    Fu Hao - Shang Dynasty
    Trưng Sisters - Vietnam
    Börte - Mongol Empire
    Theodora - Byzantine Empire
    Tomyris - Scythians
    Each one of them great in their own right.

    • @silverloony1170
      @silverloony1170 2 роки тому +10

      Adding to this impressive list:
      Marie-Thérèse Figueur - Female French soldier serving from 1793 to 1815
      Running Eagle - Blackfeet tribe war chief
      Elizabeth Cochran/Nellie Bly - American investigative journalist
      Virginia Hall - WWII spy for the Allied forces
      Locusta - Roman assassin known as the Poisoner
      Marie Curie - Polish & naturalized-French scientist
      Mochizuki Chiyome - Japanese leader of female ninjas

    • @smileyface81mc77
      @smileyface81mc77 2 роки тому +8

      Would like to add Julie d’Aubigny, a master swordswoman and opera singer from France who spent her relatively short life destroying any man who dared challenge her to a sword fight, briefly becoming a nun so she could hook up with and then break out her at-the-time girlfriend, running from the law, and just generally being a total badass.

    • @stevenchoza6391
      @stevenchoza6391 2 роки тому +3

      You forgot Joan of Arc.

    • @atdcaffeine
      @atdcaffeine 2 роки тому +2

      Olga of Kiev is absolutely based.

    • @katestarnes1709
      @katestarnes1709 2 роки тому +4

      Kyiv* not Kiev, really important distinction to make right now

  • @sabertoothkim
    @sabertoothkim 2 роки тому +17

    Scrolling through this comments section and finding person after person enthusiastically sharing all their favorite female historical figures who didn't make it into the deck/video has really made my day. Thank you so much, everybody!

  • @lewycraft
    @lewycraft 2 роки тому +535

    Kind of sad that no Slavic representation got on the list, would love to have Jadwiga Adegaweńska, king of Poland here or Milunka Savić, most decorated female combatant in the recorded history or warfare, comming from Serbia... Heck, even Catherine the Great of Russia, probably among 3 most influencial and important Russian monarchs in the history.

    • @lubue5795
      @lubue5795 2 роки тому +114

      Well, there are tons of famous women who didn't make the list. Marie Curie, Jeanne D'Arc, Margret Thatcher, Mother Teresa, etc.
      Blue had the hard task to pick ten out of the hundreds or thousands there are.

    • @ΣτελιοςΠεππας
      @ΣτελιοςΠεππας 2 роки тому +7

      It's all about bullshit representation. Apparently it's better to include a librarian, a scholar and a queen who wasn't a queen than include women who ACTUALLY changed the world.

    • @annakilifa331
      @annakilifa331 2 роки тому +19

      @@lubue5795 13 not 10, but yes

    • @Metal_Maoist
      @Metal_Maoist 2 роки тому +105

      Or, you know, maybe it's important to showcase some of the other important women throughout history instead of just talking about the ones everyone already knows about

    • @mckenzielyonas7840
      @mckenzielyonas7840 2 роки тому +79

      @@lubue5795 Margaret Thatcher and Mother Teresa don't really belong here in my opinion, but I was surprised Jeanne D'Arc didn't make the cut

  • @mutantmaster1
    @mutantmaster1 2 роки тому +71

    Olga of Kiev
    woman was a combination of Doom Guy and a 4-D chess game with how she handled all the people who wanted to court her and the land she held

    • @J.D.Paterborn
      @J.D.Paterborn 2 роки тому +2

      ALSO the second Catholic saint in the list! Saints don't play

    • @ethanmacleod1721
      @ethanmacleod1721 2 роки тому +4

      Well, incendiary birds speak for themselves

    • @dragon12234
      @dragon12234 2 роки тому

      Kiev should be spelled Kyiv, Kiev originating as the Russian name for the city, whilst Kyiv is the original

    • @Akuryoutaisan21
      @Akuryoutaisan21 2 роки тому +6

      @@dragon12234 Kyiv isn't the original, it's just the way it's pronounced in modern Ukrainian language so they want people to use it to assert their independence from Russia. In Old Ukranian it is written as Києвъ

    • @medd-lee
      @medd-lee 2 роки тому +3

      She really deserves a video from Blue, seriously. She's such a fascinating person

  • @MysteriumArcanum
    @MysteriumArcanum 2 роки тому +131

    I think if you ever did another one of these another woman you can talk about is Milunka Savic, a Serbian woman who pulled a Mulan to join the army in place of her brother in WWI. Oh, and she also just so happens to be the most decorated female soldier in history.

    • @kinrateia
      @kinrateia 2 роки тому +11

      I mean there are quite a lot of women who pulled a Mulan to go to army it makes more sense to make an episode solely about them since most of them actually contributed not that much to the actual flow of history and it's their acts that are respectable not amount of contribution

    • @blackvial
      @blackvial 2 роки тому +3

      Sabaton just did a song about her, Lady of the dark

    • @MysteriumArcanum
      @MysteriumArcanum 2 роки тому +2

      @@blackvial I'm well aware, that song was my whole reasoning for bringing her up. Before I heard it last night I had never even heard of her.

    • @Meshakhad
      @Meshakhad 2 роки тому +6

      RAISE YOUR HAND
      FOR THE LADY OF THE DARK

    • @YataTheFifteenth
      @YataTheFifteenth 2 роки тому +3

      SOLDIER WITH NO WILL TO KILL
      WITH A PHILANTROPIC HEART

  • @thatguymaurille
    @thatguymaurille 2 роки тому +32

    One of my favorites is Queen Amanirenas. The one eyed Kushite Kandake who fought Rome. Not only did she beat Rome at first, she got them to agree to a peace treaty that mostly favored the Kushitic people.

  • @hitrapperandartistdababy
    @hitrapperandartistdababy 2 роки тому +65

    Should have included Theodora, Wife of Justinian the 1st. Propably my favourite woman of history. Utter badass, competent politician and even married for love

    • @AskMia411
      @AskMia411 2 роки тому +10

      Blue did a video on her if you're interested. I think it might be one of the Valentine's day video

    • @hitrapperandartistdababy
      @hitrapperandartistdababy 2 роки тому +3

      @@AskMia411 oh really? Nice!

  • @matmil5
    @matmil5 2 роки тому +53

    Lack of Jadwiga of Poland saddens me a bit, but i guess that just shows how many badass, wise and strong some across history there were!

  • @ThisCatBoring
    @ThisCatBoring 2 роки тому +17

    1:15 Love Indian representation, Jhansi ki Ranibai is another best example of Badass Indian women 👌👌

  • @ryansmith841
    @ryansmith841 2 роки тому +77

    Knowing Blue’s love of Florence I’m surprised that the “queen who married into the French monarchy” wasn’t Catherine de Medici

    • @anonymousfellow8879
      @anonymousfellow8879 2 роки тому +10

      Blue didn’t pick the list, he covered the women featured on the kickstarter deck

  • @zenebean
    @zenebean 2 роки тому +15

    The comments being full of suggestions for other amazing female figures in history just makes me so happy

  • @epicmarschmallow5049
    @epicmarschmallow5049 2 роки тому +179

    Hoping to hear about Emmy Noether, one of the greatest minds of the 20th century

    • @kaloyanmanchev6613
      @kaloyanmanchev6613 2 роки тому +2

      Who

    • @insertnamehere7583
      @insertnamehere7583 2 роки тому +2

      Never heard of her

    • @blahturretx7327
      @blahturretx7327 2 роки тому +39

      Just did a five second Wikipedia search. Emmy Noether made many advancements in abstract algebra, discovered Noether's theorem which is fundamental to mathematical physics, and according to multiple major mathematicians and physicists, Einstein included, was considered the single most important woman in the history of mathematics.

    • @RorikH
      @RorikH 2 роки тому +21

      She's one of those people who is so smart that her brilliance will never be appreciated by anyone else without a large ph6socs background.

    • @TheStyx13
      @TheStyx13 2 роки тому +16

      She deserves an entire episode. Or at least a women of mathematics episode where she’s headlining.

  • @cesargonzalez6651
    @cesargonzalez6651 2 роки тому +21

    This is an interesting project, I hope we can get a second deck of cards in the future with a similar idea (or a part 2).
    The first women who made history that came to my mind was Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, a writer, philosopher, nun and nurse that lived on New Spain (Mexico) during the colonial era.
    She grew up the americas, learning from a young age, thanks to her family's library, she became fluent in Latin and Nahuatl, wrote a lot of good plays and poems. Like Hildegard of Bingen, she became part of the Catholic church, but she was always at odds with them.
    "Foolish men who accuse women without reason, without seeing that you are the reason of the very thing you blame."
    Her criticism of misogyny and the hypocrisy of men led to her condemnation by the church, she told them that God would not have given women intelect, if he didn't want them to use it. After that, she was forced to only work on charity, nursing the poor, had to sell all of her books, was no longer permitted to write and had to renew her vows.
    She did as she was told, getting bad mouthed by everyone around her, calling her a bad example of a nun and woman.When renewing her vows, she signed them with: "I, the worst of all" with her own blood (one last "screw you all" to her attackers).
    She died the next year, having caught the plague while treating her sisters. One of the best poet and philosopher of Mexico.

  • @singleheadedhydra6360
    @singleheadedhydra6360 2 роки тому +55

    It's a very roundabout way of influencing history but Clotilde, wife of Clovis I played a large part in establishing Catholicism as the majority sect of European Christianity. The Franks that weren't pagan mostly followed Arian Christianity but Clotilde, being from an area just northwest of Italy, followed what was at the time the mainline orthodox Christianity. She raised her children in that form of Christianity and played a major role in convincing her husband to convert. Clovis would go on to conquer large swaths of territory in what is now modern France and Germany, and the Frankish Kingdom this established would, a few centuries later, have its king crowned as Emperor: Charlemagne.

  • @katebraidish4392
    @katebraidish4392 2 роки тому +3

    This video was posted this morning on my birthday, what a great gift! Y’all’s channel has really gotten me through quarantine and helped respark my love of mythology and history. From the bottom of my heart, thank you for this channel and all of the hard work you put into it!

  • @samfisher6606
    @samfisher6606 2 роки тому +142

    You guys should do a deck with the Olympians. With Hades as the Ace and Hestia as the Joker. I would buy all of the decks

    • @thehellenicneopagan
      @thehellenicneopagan 2 роки тому +11

      Hades not technically an Olympian... Joker not really part of the 12 card deck, and Hestia by far the worst candidate for the joker card! 🙄

    • @ringarrod1218
      @ringarrod1218 2 роки тому +18

      Definitely think Artemis should be Ace

    • @nionashborn7626
      @nionashborn7626 2 роки тому +10

      @@thehellenicneopagan
      >>The joke>>
      You.

    • @Izzy-kh6iu
      @Izzy-kh6iu 2 роки тому +7

      @@thehellenicneopagan I think part of the Hestia thing was that Hestia is only sometimes listed amongst the Olympians, trading places with Dionysus. Do feel like life of the party Dionysus would be a better Joker though.

    • @TheHorseOutside
      @TheHorseOutside 2 роки тому +11

      Nah bro, Artemis already has the slot as Ace of the Olympians, archery and sexuality combined

  • @theman44ful
    @theman44ful 2 роки тому +3

    Wish these were a little longer but I really do enjoy when there’s parts of history like this that I genuinely am in the dark on. Thank you for getting this info to the masses

  • @blaster2187
    @blaster2187 2 роки тому +95

    Yay! Zenobia was featured! Such an underrated monarch especially when Aurelian was waiting in the wings.

    • @yammoto148
      @yammoto148 2 роки тому +8

      For good reason, she suffered the most embarrassing defeat in military history, it makes all her talks of intelligence seem not as true.

    • @blaster2187
      @blaster2187 2 роки тому

      @@yammoto148 I don’t think so. She was up against a man who had grown up on the frontlines of the wars in the Danube and had the most experienced and hardened soldiers in the Empire with him. Tough odds even for a seasoned ruler.

    • @yammoto148
      @yammoto148 2 роки тому +9

      @@blaster2187 Even so, she was offered to keep her empire and her sovereign status if she payed tribute to the empire. Instead she mocked Aurelian and got her butt royally handed to her.
      She had literally all the cards, not to mention her army wasn't some barbarian rable this was an experienced and well armed army with extensive artillery and knowledge of the terrain they were fighting in. The fact that she couldn't even get a single casualty against the romans is practically insulting to the legacy she inherited from her husband.
      Worst of all she wasn't even allowed to die on her own terms like Cleopatra and Boudica she was hauled away in chains and humiliated for the rest of her life. I am sorry but when I think Zenobia I do not even think remotely great.
      Her whole character is a tragedy rather than a success of any kind.

    • @machirim2805
      @machirim2805 2 роки тому +1

      Zenobia is not underrated. She was merely a woman who made history for being terrible in the art of statesmanship and warfare. She’s like Cleopatra but far worse.

    • @blaster2187
      @blaster2187 2 роки тому +1

      @@machirim2805 I respectfully disagree. Aurelian had one of the strongest and most experiences armies of the day, especially after fighting through the Crisis of the Third Century, and there's nothing in her credentials that suggest she was a poor stateswoman or in warfare, she had to go up against Aurelian who steamrolled everyone in his way. Honestly, had she arisen at a different time when you didn't have the Illyrian Roman Emperors controlling the Danube Legions, I can see her starting an Eastern Roman Empire early.

  • @artemisbelial8241
    @artemisbelial8241 2 роки тому +52

    I really wish this would have covered some of the amazing women of history native to the America's. Or Africa outside of Egypt. They get overlooked on everything and it's such a shame.

    • @Turquerina
      @Turquerina 2 роки тому +14

      Agreed, there's so much more. There are great women who made strides in American history such as Kateri Tekakwitha (renowned for her Catholic virtue of chastity) and Pocahontas, in the face of colonial influences during the early modern period. With regards to Sub-Saharan Africa, we have Queen Nzinga of Ndongo and Matamba who fought for independence from the Portuguese and famously had a servant be her seat during a meeting with a governor when she was not offered one. While it's important to recognize that, like all people, these women have flaws, so are all the other famous figures we learn about.

    • @rileynewman-gatton8549
      @rileynewman-gatton8549 2 роки тому +2

      @@Turquerina Came here to say nzinga as well.

  • @hyperdimensionbliss
    @hyperdimensionbliss 2 роки тому +271

    Jeanne d'Arc remains one of the most important and interesting historical figures in all of European history, change my mind.

    • @dongiovanni4331
      @dongiovanni4331 2 роки тому +10

      St Olga?

    • @kaloyanmanchev6613
      @kaloyanmanchev6613 2 роки тому +21

      @@dongiovanni4331 HE SAID ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT

    • @Nightmarished
      @Nightmarished 2 роки тому +18

      Honestly I'm more of a Frederick the Great fan, what with him being so influential in the use of artillery in warfare. He also composed over 50 songs, and of course (We stan a gay king)

    • @alicjak700
      @alicjak700 2 роки тому +7

      I'd say each country had at least one (or more than a few) "most important and interesting female figure"

    • @talos2384
      @talos2384 2 роки тому +34

      One of the most interesting? yes. One of the most Important? not really. She was definitely one of the most important figures in French history, but all of Europe? No.

  • @BritishTeaLover
    @BritishTeaLover 2 роки тому +6

    3:55 Another thing that counted against Sappho was the dialect she spoke/wrote in. When people learned Greek after her death, they learned the dialect that let them read things like the Illiad/Odyssy, which was different to what Sappho wrote in. And given how poetry often doesn't translate too well, it meant fewer and fewer people were able to read what she had written, becoming one cause of the lack of popularity until more modern times.

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss 2 роки тому +3

      Blue goes into detail about this very thing in his video on Sappho.

  • @ellagershon4092
    @ellagershon4092 2 роки тому +22

    I would love it if OSP made full-length videos for some of these women. I know that a couple have already been featured, but all of these women sound amazing and deserve more time.

    • @ellagershon4092
      @ellagershon4092 2 роки тому +4

      I mean, I’ve read a lot of books that briefly mention Zenobia or Eleanor of Aquitaine, but they seem like fascinating people who deserve more scholarship. Not to mention that at least half of these women are people I wish I’d heard of before now.

    • @ellagershon4092
      @ellagershon4092 2 роки тому +3

      Not to mention that this video brings up another fascinating subject- the roles women have had in shaping religious ideologies. Two of these women were instrumental in forming major religions as they exist today and I’ve never even heard of them before! Granted, these are religions I don’t know a lot about, I’ve learned a lot about important men with similar roles just from cultural osmosis.

  • @kennyb1588
    @kennyb1588 2 роки тому +28

    Really loving all the comments suggesting more women throughout history who didn’t make the video! Keep ‘em coming! ❤️

  • @pineapple_the_turtle
    @pineapple_the_turtle 2 роки тому +46

    I really love this episode, all of these women deserve movies, musicals and museums of their own

  • @johnkiezulas7439
    @johnkiezulas7439 2 роки тому +59

    I'm a little disappointed you didnt get to mention Hojo Masako. A woman who earned one of the more unique honorifics in history. The nun shogun.

    • @twistedtachyon5877
      @twistedtachyon5877 2 роки тому +5

      Huh. That does indeed sound like an interesting story.

  • @piccolo917
    @piccolo917 2 роки тому +55

    One of my favorite women in history is Hypatia, a natural philosopher and “first” female mathematician who lived in Alexandria during the Christianization of the Roman Empire (late 300s). She was part of the people who desperately, and sadly ulitimately unsuccessfully, tried to keep the last remnant of the library of Alexandria alive. She died at the hands of a Christian sect because they saw her as a witch

    • @philiphart4146
      @philiphart4146 2 роки тому +16

      This is a very popular and well-liked story that I'm sorry to inform you that the narrative about her is wrong in basically every aspect beyond "Hypatia was a talented mathematician who lived in Alexandria".
      - The "last remnant of the library of Alexandria" was the Serapheum, a temple of the Graeco-Egyptian god Serapis. It was previously used as an annex for books, but by 391 AD, when it was destroyed on the orders of Emperor Theodosius as recompense for a massacre of Christians by pagan sectarians, there is no evidence for and strong evidence against it being used for any kind of scholastic work. (The actual Great Library, of course, was initially damaged by Julius Caesar during his siege of Alexandria and almost certainly destroyed during the many, MANY battles in Alexandria during the Crisis of the Third Century- no mob of rabid Christians who hated learning were involved.) Hypathia couldn't have been "one of the people who desperately tried to keep the last remnant of the Library of Alexandria alive" because that last remnant (the Mouseion of Alexandria) ceased being funded and collapsed a century before her birth.
      - Hypatia was assassinated due to a political intrigue between Orestes, the Prefect of Alexandria, and Cyril, the Bishop, over who would control the city- as an advisor of Orestes and a respected philosopher, she was a perfect target for the mob violence that was so common in Alexandria during the era. "She was a witch" wasn't even an excuse used at the time- the justification circulated by the mob was a conspiracy that Hypatia was slighting Cyril and preventing reconciliation between the two factions. The first accusations of witchcraft postdate her death by almost 3 centuries.
      - It should be noted that both Orestes and Cyril (and in fact probably 80% of all the people involved in any role) were Christians, and Hypatia herself wasn't a "pagan" in any traditional sense: she was a Neoplatonist and a noted ascetic. An apocryphal story goes that when one of her colleagues confessed his affection for her and desire for her hand in marriage, she supposedly presented him with a rag stained with her menses and said "This is what you are in love with. You do not love beauty for its own sake."
      Hypatia the Martyr for Science is a very powerful and moving story, but it's also a hagiography in the purest sense: almost entirely made from whole cloth and bearing scarce resemblance to the life of the person it's actually based on. Which is a shame, because the actual story of Hypatia, in my opinion, is far more interesting: a woman who managed to rise to high station within the deeply sexist society of the Roman Empire only to be cut down during a period of deep political and civic tension.

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw 2 роки тому

      my god hypatia is one very powerful great scientist(civ 6)

  • @avivalewinter3000
    @avivalewinter3000 2 роки тому +10

    I’m glad that buying the cards also supports the Malala Fund and girls being able to get the education they deserve.

  • @Erik-pu4mj
    @Erik-pu4mj 2 роки тому +8

    Blue's rapid fire complex pronunciations have me intimidated and impressed.

  • @flyingjose7217
    @flyingjose7217 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you, thank you, thank you. I'm doing extemporaneous speeches at a tournament next weekend and with how short these descriptions are they're perfect for using in a speech. Great content. I love what you all crank out. Keep this good shit up.

  • @BadPenny3
    @BadPenny3 2 роки тому +3

    I came home today to a tiny little box on my front doorstep - my shiny, brand new History Makers card deck! The cards are beautiful, the art is awesome, and even the box for the cards themselves is really nice! I bought two decks specially to be able to give it as a gift, and I am thrilled with the quality.

  • @andrewmelton9483
    @andrewmelton9483 2 роки тому +2

    I've never been so emotional during an intro, y'all rock so much for donating!!!!

  • @niwaka273
    @niwaka273 2 роки тому +9

    Props to Red who drew the ladies in question ^^
    I like the art style a lot

    • @gracehiggins2666
      @gracehiggins2666 2 роки тому +3

      If you're talking about the art on the cards, they were all drawn by Zebby Wahls, co-creator of The Woman Cards.

  • @Mo-lm3mf
    @Mo-lm3mf 2 роки тому +1

    Im so happy that you included Queen Lili’uokalani!!!! Thank you so much! She was such an amazing woman and its so nice to see when people talk about her and her legacy.

  • @natethegreat5968
    @natethegreat5968 2 роки тому +72

    Can we talk about Milunka Savić the most-decorated female soldier in the history of warfare

    • @xingyuzhao8666
      @xingyuzhao8666 2 роки тому +7

      Hmm maybe a semi-popular metal band should write a song about it in their second album on the Great War... Ahh if only

    • @siriusindustriesllc238
      @siriusindustriesllc238 2 роки тому +3

      @@xingyuzhao8666 you mean Lady of the Dark?

  • @DarksideModerator27
    @DarksideModerator27 2 роки тому +34

    Sorry if this comment turns into a firestorm. But I need to call something out.
    The artwork from Women Card(s) depicts Hapshetsut with a Nubian or "Sub-Saharan" phenotype, which is incorrect and potentially dangerous. Studies on the mummy determined she was of Egyptian/Near Eastern ancestry and appearance, not Nubian. There is already a dangerous trend of misinformation and appropriation/erasure of Egyptian history by Afrocentrists. And I feel it is irresponsible to contribute to this trend, even by accident.
    Anyways, just one flaw in an otherwise great video. The women of history absolutely need more visibility, and I hope to see more videos like this in the future.
    Peace. If you do reply please be civil.

    • @als3022
      @als3022 2 роки тому +9

      Yeah, I have noticed that too. It's because people have this very narrow view of Africa. They forget that it is a very diverse continent. And a rather huge continent separated by some harsh environments. Those from the Congo are going to be very different from those North of the Sahara. Who will be very different from those at the very tip near Antartica.
      There was a Nubian dynasty, but I think that was only a single century. Until the Assyrians showed up. I need some books on the Assyrian and Babylonian Empires.

    • @egekazkayas8968
      @egekazkayas8968 2 роки тому

      Can you explain to me what exactly Afrocentrism is ?

    • @starcapture3040
      @starcapture3040 2 роки тому

      @@egekazkayas8968 they claim that north Africa and the middle east were black but erouepn occuaption from greeks to romans changed the population and made it white or light brown. thus the achievements of those civilizations were black but europeans white washed them.

  • @arseniyivanchikov6878
    @arseniyivanchikov6878 2 роки тому +8

    Could you maybe do an episode on each of the women present? This would be a good series for Women's month and also promote the cards.

  • @raidenyvelina8558
    @raidenyvelina8558 2 роки тому +2

    one of my fav vids youve put out for sure. always love hearing about cleopatra, sappho, and ching shih especially

  • @uria3679
    @uria3679 2 роки тому +46

    Who hopes that Red talks about the Anarchist Trope (so she has to watch Arcane), the Sheltered Character Trope (so she has to watch Arcane), the Sassy Character Trope (so she has to watch Arcane), the Crime Lord Trope (so she has to watch Arcane), the Guilt Of Killing Trope (so she has to watch Arcane), the Survivor Trope (so she has to watch Arcane), or the Emotional Fight Scene (so she has to watch Arcane)

    • @kaloyanmanchev6613
      @kaloyanmanchev6613 2 роки тому +3

      You realize that all things thinks are very used and popular soArcane is not a recruitment

    • @luigiboi4244
      @luigiboi4244 2 роки тому +1

      I hope she talks about The Multiverse Trope, so she can talk about my favorite theoretical topic.

    • @rionamcauliffe5469
      @rionamcauliffe5469 2 роки тому +1

      @@luigiboi4244 what's your favorite example of it in media? mine's spiderman: into the spiderverse, but I haven't seen many others that use it

    • @discountchocolate4577
      @discountchocolate4577 2 роки тому

      The anarchist villain trope video needs a disclaimer that Hollywood anarchists != political anarchists. Examples like the Dark Knight's Joker, or Zaheer from season 3 of Legend of Korra, are definitely Hollywood anarchists - they are anti-authoritarian agents of chaos - but at no point can they be lumped together with the likes of real-world anarchists like Kropotkin, essentially communists who want to abolish the state without first building a workers' state.

  • @YoukaiSlayer12
    @YoukaiSlayer12 2 роки тому +2

    That was a great tour of who, when, & where of some awesome ladies.

  • @reapeashooter2
    @reapeashooter2 2 роки тому +8

    Awesome stuff here, Blue!

  • @catherinepoteat
    @catherinepoteat 2 роки тому +6

    Hildegard von Bingen finally getting some respect! 😤 She's absolutely incredible, and I wish more Catholic saints could get recognized in this card deck. St. Scolastica and St. Clare of Assisi are obvious ones, starting womens' religious orders, but also St. Elizabeth of Hungary (who was a queen), St. Joan of Arc (WHO FOUGHT FOR FRANCE AND WAS BURNED AT THE STAKE WITH ONLY HER HEART REMAINING INTACT), And All the Other Martyrs of the Church, Felicity and Perpetua, Agatha, Lucy, Agnes, Cecilia.
    Plus, MARY THE MOTHER OF GOD, QUEEN OF HEAVEN AND EARTH, VIRGIN AND MOTHER.

  • @Heothbremel
    @Heothbremel 2 роки тому +87

    Would have loved to see more Indigenous/South American women, loving the women here... ❤
    Edit: I should have written that out better. I had meant specifically more indigenous women of North and South America, because those are some of the women I'd love to hear more about especially, but I also do mean more women of indigenous peoples around the world because I don't know enough of them.

    • @kaloyanmanchev6613
      @kaloyanmanchev6613 2 роки тому +1

      Like who ?

    • @sizanogreen9900
      @sizanogreen9900 2 роки тому +12

      @@kaloyanmanchev6613 wasn't there like that wise woman in the iriquois confederacy? But yeah, honestly I am also pulling a blank here.
      There probably were tons but mostly thanks to a certain bunch of barbaric spaniards we have lost most written and knotted records of the civilisations who had those and later events resulted in a loss of many of the oral records as well so we sadly don't really know much.

    • @100bruinsrule
      @100bruinsrule 2 роки тому +4

      @@kaloyanmanchev6613 Jigonsaseh, she was one of the founders of the haudenosaunee confederacy, which is one of (if not the) oldest living democracies in the world.

    • @kaloyanmanchev6613
      @kaloyanmanchev6613 2 роки тому +1

      @@sizanogreen9900 Yea I think this a little bit too regional.

    • @kaloyanmanchev6613
      @kaloyanmanchev6613 2 роки тому +1

      @@100bruinsrule San Marino is a lot older

  • @charlesbrooks94
    @charlesbrooks94 2 роки тому +4

    Sappho of Lesbos I always found interesting tbh.
    I took a creative writing class in college last year where I wrote a short story about a reincarnation of Sappho crushing on a reincarnation of French opera singer and duelist Julie d’Aubigny…
    My professor loved it 🤣

  • @In_Our_Timeline
    @In_Our_Timeline 2 роки тому +7

    “I pray every single moment of my life; not on my knees but with my work. My prayer is to lift women to equality with men. Work and worship are one with me.”
    ― Susan B. Anthony

  • @avivalewinter3000
    @avivalewinter3000 2 роки тому +47

    It’s wonderful that we have a month to talk about these women, but it makes me sad that we frequently don’t talk about Women’s History the rest of the year(or black people outside of Black History Month for that matter).

    • @als3022
      @als3022 2 роки тому +6

      Let's be frank, people don't talk about history at all very often except some excerpts they might have read from their textbooks when they were younger. And we should talk about it all the time. Maybe people would learn from the mistakes of the past.

    • @destroyraiden
      @destroyraiden 2 роки тому +1

      The months were made so they'd continue the othering of these groups so they didn't have to incorporate blacks, women, or hardly anyone else into the white male Victorian crafted narrative and we'll continue to see it's exclusion for the majority of history taught in schools, hell we can't even get inclusion for actual historical things like the civil war every official civil war book put out by the history channel refuses to include women who fought in combat I've got 8 women fighting in Gettysburg alone and only 2 died during it and there is always room for more one woman in there fought well over 10 other battles before coming to Gettysburg.

    • @N.I.A23
      @N.I.A23 2 роки тому

      Women should be thankful we even mention them..... or are you forgetting that they mean nothing????

  • @kelseadirmann3434
    @kelseadirmann3434 2 роки тому +3

    Can y’all do some more of these? There are so many amazing women in history that aren’t commonly known but should be

  • @bestsynth4102
    @bestsynth4102 2 роки тому +1

    Hey OSP! Chinese guy here.
    In the cards there is a character called "Ching Shih", and I actually had to look it up since I had no idea who that was.
    Apparently it was Zheng Yi Sao (郑一嫂, lit. "Zheng Yi's wife"), and "Ching Shih" (郑氏, lit. "of the Zheng family", as wives used to take the surname of the husbands) was in Cantonese, a language I don't speak. I am sure you know that she was a famous Qing-dynasty pirate and girlboss by trade.
    Well, overly awkward comment over, I guess. Keep up the good work!

  • @fashizle4454
    @fashizle4454 2 роки тому +18

    Where’s Catherine the great. I mean she’s the only female I can think of known as the great. Expanded the Russian empire by 520,000km was winning wars, opened traid with Japan and China and started the golden age of Russia. I would Genuinely is say she did more in her life then all the women on this list put together.

    • @Oofasleep
      @Oofasleep 2 роки тому +4

      It's because everyone already knows who Catherine the Great is, most of the women in this video are usually known by a few members of their own community.

  • @bruisesandmuffins
    @bruisesandmuffins 2 роки тому +1

    Omg so excited for those cards, itll go great with a set I got from the Boeing museum of flight which was same concept but women in STEM fields!! Tysm for this!!!!

  • @ellliechambers7335
    @ellliechambers7335 2 роки тому +13

    This is awsome. And since there are so many awesome women, I would love this as a series.

  • @-No_3-
    @-No_3- Рік тому +2

    6:13 also there’s a layer in London archaeology called the boudica destruction horizon witch is metal

  • @Stidly71
    @Stidly71 2 роки тому +13

    I wish you added Theodora she beautiful smart and help kept the eastern Roman Empire from disaster on multiple occasions

  • @zidaryn
    @zidaryn 2 роки тому +2

    3:30 After watching 'One Topic At A Time' vids. I am quite aware of Sapho. If you haven't heard of it, there's a Redit called 'Sapho and her friends' which is devoted to looking at gay erasure.
    Why is the subredit about Gay erasure you ask? Well historians were prudes and decided that all of Sapho's poems were just about 'her good friends' and not that she was a full on lesbian. The word lesbian has its roots in the island that Sapho lived on, the island of Lesbos.

  • @anonymousfellow8879
    @anonymousfellow8879 2 роки тому +4

    You guys. Blue already said this is going over the women featured on the deck of cards. Of course there are other women. Please stop complaining. This is essentially a companion piece to the deck’s kickstarter

  • @tanyapillai8829
    @tanyapillai8829 2 роки тому +2

    This video was really amazing. I wish we could have more details about women like them.

  • @divyanshushete5772
    @divyanshushete5772 2 роки тому +8

    It's First time I have seen someone talk about Gargi out of Indian History circles. Great work

  • @mattisvov
    @mattisvov 2 роки тому +1

    A few I've never heard of, and some more info on the ones I had heard of. Very interesting. Badass ladies aplenty.
    Hatshepsut gotta be one of the most epic rules ever.

  • @deargodwhatamidoing1122
    @deargodwhatamidoing1122 2 роки тому +13

    Honestly, The fact that I can name a lot of other amazing women through out history, that isn’t included here, is amazing. Women and men might not have been on equal footing, but that did not stop any of these, and manny other, women from being amazing badass queens.

    • @als3022
      @als3022 2 роки тому +3

      Nobility does help.

  • @ngtskynebula
    @ngtskynebula 2 роки тому +1

    I loved this so much I can't even put it into words. BLUE, YOU ROCK! THANK YOU SO, SO MUCH FOR THE LOVELY CONTENT 😭💖

  • @InkanSpider
    @InkanSpider 2 роки тому +4

    There are three queens I wish had been at least mentioned or got their own spots on the list: King Kristina of Sweden, Queen Lovisa Ulrika of Sweden, and Queen Louise of Prussia. The first two left a big cultural impact on Sweden, while Louise of Prussia was an incredible diplomat and was even praised by Napoleon. She was also known for her generosity towards her people and she was incredibly beloved

    • @Cecilia-ky3uw
      @Cecilia-ky3uw 2 роки тому

      kristina did little but to ruin sweden as a nation, sure culturally she did STUFF but they costed a lot, I can't argue too much about Louise of Prussia, whilst Lovisa Ulrika I guess could be a candidate but she did very little in comparison to others

  • @anonymousperson4214
    @anonymousperson4214 2 роки тому +1

    I love this video, not just because it's a great video, but also because the comments are just full of people talking about women being awesome through history 💜

  • @In_Our_Timeline
    @In_Our_Timeline 2 роки тому +6

    "they used to undergo such metamorphoses in ancient times (or so they say), though whether that is myth or a true story I know not. Maybe it would be better to change one's nature into something that lacks all feeling, rather than be so sensitive to evil. Had that been possible, these calamities would in all probability have turned me to stone.”
    ― Anna Comnena,

  • @allisondempsey982
    @allisondempsey982 2 роки тому +2

    Please do a part 2 of this. There are so many great women out there who have done Great deeds and accomplishments that need to have their stories told. I would love to see your take on many of them including Good Queen "Bess" AKA Queen Elizabeth the First.
    Good Queen Bess brought about the Golden Age of of prosperity to England and she was a patreon for William Shakespeare and Francis Drake. If you were to look up the definition of a queen, then you would see a picture of Queen Elizabeth as the ideal example of a Queen.
    Anyway, this was an enjoyable video to watch. Thank you so much, Blue.

  • @GhostBear3067
    @GhostBear3067 2 роки тому +6

    This needs a Part 2 with Saint Olga of Kyiv.

  • @Karalyn2001
    @Karalyn2001 2 роки тому +1

    This was so refreshing! I would LOVE to see more on women making history.

  • @bara8928
    @bara8928 2 роки тому +6

    "Kerowyn, Kerowyn, where are you going?
    Dressed in men's clothing, a sword by your side
    Your face pale as death, and your eyes full of fury
    Kerowyn, Kerowyn, where do you ride?
    Last night in the darkness black reavers attacked us
    Our Hall lays in ruins below
    They've stolen our treasure and the bride of my brother
    And to her aid now I must go,
    To her side now I must go
    Kerowyn, Kerowyn, where is your father?
    And where is your brother? This task should be theirs
    It is not seemly for maids to be warriors
    Go back to your valley, and to woman's cares
    My father lies dead at the hands of their leader
    My brother lies raving in pain
    The raiders left no man unwounded to free her
    But in their hands she'll not remain,
    I vow she'll not with them remain
    Kerowyn, Kerowyn, where are your senses?
    What can you hope to accomplish alone
    You have no knowledge of war or of weapons
    Why loose your life, for a girl you scarce known
    This is far more than a matter of honor
    And more than a matter of pride
    She's but a child, all alone and unaided
    And someone at least should've tried,
    So now to her rescue I ride
    Grandmother, grandmother I need a weapon
    I'm one against many, and I am afraid
    The reavers have bought them a dark wizard's power
    I cannot help Dierna without magic aid
    Kerowyn, grand-daughter, into your keeping
    I'll give you this sword I once wore
    Need is her name now ride fearless to battle
    She'll aid as she did me before, her magic is strong as before
    Grandmother, grandmother, why turn so willing
    Why did you try to persuade me to stay
    Whence came this weapon of steel and of magic
    And why do you choose now to give it away
    Kerowyn, not for the weak or the fearful
    Is the path of a warrior maid
    You've passed all my tests, now ride out with my blessings
    And trust in the spell of the blade, ride now and go unafraid"
    Kerowyn´s Ride - Mercedes Lackey

  • @cosmopeaches2604
    @cosmopeaches2604 2 роки тому +1

    OMG, I need to know more about Ching Shih, she sounds amazing! Please make a video all about her, and all the other amazing women you presented here that you haven't made their own video about yet. Please!

  • @magnusbergqvist2123
    @magnusbergqvist2123 2 роки тому +4

    Other women who left their mark in history: Lady Ada Lovelace - The worlds first programmer (Babbages Difference engine), or Marie Curie - the only person to win 2 nobel prizes (Physics + Chemistry).

    • @melsch8740
      @melsch8740 2 роки тому +2

      (shhhh several people won two Nobel prizes, but she was the first one to win two, is the only woman with 2 Nobel prizes to this day and one of only two people to get two Nobel prizes in different fields)

  • @rileyhenderson374
    @rileyhenderson374 2 роки тому +1

    There's a video game that brought up a really cool woman too. In Genshin Impact there's a new character Dehya who comes from the desert of its new Persian based region Sumeru.
    Googling Dehya you get Al Kahina who was a Phoenician descended Berber queen of the Maghreb and she is famous for holding back the Muslim Conquest of her region. Her accomplishment is so popular in the region that she's still used as a symbol of anti-colonialism and her religious affiliation has been claimed by Jews and Christians and her ethnicity has been claimed by modern day North Africans.
    It has been theorized by players that Dehya and the Eremite tribe she belongs to will become the new leaders of the region by the end of the main story.

  • @jonathanfaber3291
    @jonathanfaber3291 2 роки тому +3

    God I hope you’ll do a full episode on Tomoe one day

  • @pachacutti1012
    @pachacutti1012 2 роки тому +1

    Olga of Keiv would have been a great addition to this list, you guys should make a part 2, there are so many awesome women in history who deserve the spotlight

  • @Shugamri
    @Shugamri 2 роки тому +10

    Yes! This week's Wordle Pokecatch (me screenshoting the upload seconds after it goes live) is another success!

  • @peggyliepmann5248
    @peggyliepmann5248 2 роки тому

    Joining the chorus of "I just got my cards today"! The designs are fantastic!

  • @thejcaesar42
    @thejcaesar42 2 роки тому +6

    This video taught me that the true enemy of women, is the Roman Empire.

  • @coyoten8897
    @coyoten8897 2 роки тому

    what a treat of a video, deeply appreciate how wide you cast the net on this vid

  • @gekostar22
    @gekostar22 2 роки тому +3

    I hope this deck does well because there for sure are many more amazing women that could/should be highlighted for a second deck or even enough to have a full deck of 13 different women for each suit.

    • @gekostar22
      @gekostar22 2 роки тому +1

      Could even set up themes for the different suits like: spades for warriors/generals, hearts for the saints/poets, diamonds for science/tech/medical, and clubs for achievements (I'm thinking like Amelia Earhart) just spit balling ideas. Anyone can feel free to use these ideas.

  • @ceres090
    @ceres090 2 роки тому +1

    I've sung some of Hildegarde's pieces. They are amazing!

  • @emmagar
    @emmagar 2 роки тому +13

    Happy women's history month!

  • @Bokkensword
    @Bokkensword 2 роки тому +1

    Man, these are some amazing women but there are so many other greats!
    Hopefully a second one comes out soon!

  • @aidenburgess217
    @aidenburgess217 2 роки тому +4

    I wanna see a Vikings style series about boudica. Itd be a balls to the wall story about someone's mum who's just so, so angry

    • @pattheplanter
      @pattheplanter 2 роки тому +3

      Or a privileged aristocrat who doesn't want to let go of power that she only had because she and her husband collaborated with the enemy for twenty years. Should have noticed that the new guy in power was Nero.

  • @trash-heap3989
    @trash-heap3989 2 роки тому

    I'm very glad I saved this to my watch list. This was fun and nicely put together, giving us some very cool ladies of olden times to learn about! I'd love to see some animations from Terminal Montage weirdly enough on these strong and intelligent women!

  • @TheStrangeAlchemist
    @TheStrangeAlchemist 2 роки тому +6

    Quick indeed, I would honestly preferred this as mini series instead

    • @elijahfoster4380
      @elijahfoster4380 2 роки тому

      Probably would have taken too long to release in time for the kickstarter.

  • @Respectable_Username
    @Respectable_Username 2 роки тому +1

    Can't wait for a full video on each of these amazing women!

  • @notboring2792
    @notboring2792 2 роки тому +9

    why isnt my mom in this list 😢

  • @Dan_29_
    @Dan_29_ 2 роки тому +2

    I would like to add Milunka Savić to the list.The most decorated female soldier in history.She served from 1912-1918 in the balkan wars as well as the first world war.