Women Who Changed History Documentary: Part One

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Women Who Changed History Documentary: Part One


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48 Comments

  1. Throughout history right up until the 1950s, more women died in childbirth than men died in war. Women made that sacrifice to keep humanity alive, while men fought to protect that humanity. Men are honoured for the role they played (rightfully so), but no one ever acknowledges the horrors and the sacrifices that average women faced over and over again in the birthing chamber and maternity wards to literally build our future.

  2. Если в моём адресе и я включаю, то зачем этот человек из своего текста через мою жизнь и мою квартиру через мои руки рекомендует использовать котировки в их числе и мест квартир и офисов и их родины на их числа мест. Это кому надо, твой фильм и работа, рекомендуй из своего кармана и места из своих глаз и рук всех сторон квартир и офисов и их родину места где уселись глазами наблюдать за мной и подключил их числа мест квартир в мою жизнь и смерть каждый день и ночь эта мразь из этих людей которых подключил и усадил наблюдать за мной и через мою жизнь и квартиру, через мои мысли и руки устраивает себе деньги и ночь и утро и вечер и ночь на воскресенье и субботу и воскресенье на свои вопросы и предложения по уловителю громкой связи с этим фильмом всех сторон квартир

  3. An intriguing suggestion! Wu Zetian's remarkable legacy certainly deserves more attention. Kudos to British documentaries for bridging gaps in historical education and fostering curiosity worldwide.

  4. I wept for Marie Antoinette. Poor girl, the tragedy she suffered. There was absolutely no reason for her to be executed while rapists, and murderers frolicked freely about.

  5. so much of this is talking about men?? Can we get information about the women and leave the 10-15 minute monologues about the men out pls we learn about them enough as is. thnxs

  6. Women are bad a$% and sexism needs to STOP!! It's so FU%$&% UP HOW IF A WOMAN DIDN'T HAVE KIDS OR COULDN'T THEY WERE SHUNNED IT'S SO MESSED!!!! Also same thing with the parents being genetically related that's disturbing and really sick.

  7. The way the soldiers wanted to use Catherine De Medici for their pleasure is disgusting and distrurbing those aren't people those are EVIL, DISGUSTING, DISTURBING, DISGRACEFUL, SICK , MONSTERS!!!! Also arragned marriage is really messed up.

  8. I believe that men do what men do and their hatred for women make them write history to benefit themselves, the archeologist themselves could not fathom that a woman could do what men can do so they say that they lust for power and will do anything for it. All men have always been scared of women that they make sure that a woman will never be able to do what they do by knocking them down

  9. For every 20 men there is 1 woman presented here and then a few covered as a group in one episode? Really? You should change the title of this channel to ‘Men in History ‘. Weird.

  10. Huh, I didn't realize that the Hapsburgs ended with the Romanovs in Russia. If only Anastasia had survived. 😢 For some reason, I thought the Windsors were part of the family.

  11. You know as many times as I heard the story of Elizabeth Bathory, this is the first time I’ve heard this angle. It’s definitely a compelling argument and quite plausible

  12. Hatshepsut had the title of the Wife of the God ( a duty she did to Amun-Ra at his temple) , Daughter of the Pharaoh, Wife of the Pharaoh, and Regent to her stepson , her brother had to marry her because her tie to the royal bloodline was stronger than his as his mother was a concubine while her mother was the Kings Wife and sister. Learn your history.

  13. Being descended from abolitionists and suffragettes, my view of the world may be slightly different from others. My first name is the family name for Lucretia Mott and my second name from her brother William Llyod Garrison. I have noted during my short years of this mortal coil that history is invariably written by men, about men, for men. Aunt Lucretia was wholly owned by her husband and it was perfectly legal for him to beat her as long as the implement he used was no thicker than his thumb. For that, he was given a fine to pay. The long and short of it is that we haven't come anywhere near parity between the sexes. It's going on today as it did 6 thousand years ago. God forbid that a woman should be a strong ruler in her own right and claim the same power as a man. We were there to give men babies, mostly boys, please. Anne Boleyn was given 3 years to produce a son and was killed because she failed and because she tried to use her power as Queen. Empress Mathilda, had a strong and singular claim to the English crown but when she tried to wield power, she was called "she-wolf", and "poisoner of the female sex". Quite literally, the people of the medieval period considered being female as, in the time of Elizabeth I, "the illness of her gender". "A weak and feeble woman". We were expendable baby machines to be treated like our husband's favourite horse or the family dog. Aunt Lucretia knew that she would never, in her own lifetime, gain more privilege and rights and did her work for every woman right up to me, and we're still only beginning to excise the deeply held tenet that women aren't worth the oxygen we breathe and are needed only for our wombs. Heaven help those among us now whose skin is dark tan, brown, ebony, reddish or olive. I'm not even going to start with that one. The "historian" the narrator mentions in this video is very simply "full of it."

  14. My respect and admiration for Women of the past grows exponentially the more their real stories are revealed. In particular those Women who have come into power, war and politics while meeting the expectations of being a woman and mother. Many shortcomings I have learned to overcome in knowledge of the tremendous pressures they were under. With the exception of a few truly great Male Rulers, I favor most if not all of these Female Monarchs. To say that it’s a Man’s World and ignore the contributions and sacrifices made by women throughout history. Is a gross oversight that productions such as these wonderfully rectify. There’s more to the world’s story than the Patriarchy. Well Done 👏🥂

  15. So no mention of Elizabeth I of Spain, that's Elizabeth the Catholic. The woman that allowed for Columbus trip in 1492 to happen. The woman that laid down the banning of slavery in newly discovered lands, and other feats that were well ahead of her time.

    Maybe she actually deserves a whole people's profile episode by herself…

  16. I'm just glad they took the time to educate some of us that otherwise would never know. High school World history doesn't get into it in this much depth, or at all. Thank you from an "un-educated", but interested listner.

  17. Great presentation. Wonderful narrator. Clearly, there are countless other historically influential women that deserve a place in the video. But all cannot be included in one program. One questionable person included here is Elizabeth Barthory. While allegations of her cruelty and murders of hundreds of young girls made her infamous, I don't see how she "changed history." Did laws change because of her? If so, which ones? If anything, Elizabeth's personal history was changed as a result of the charges against her, particularly after her death.

  18. Two hours into this video, your focus has been on women whom you deem to have gained power through male dominated dynasties, through luck, parentage or cunning. Women have been philosophers, scientists, writers, queens, priestesses, pharaohs, poets, leaders in so many ways, mothers of invention, warriors, scholars, teachers, throughout history. I'm going to skip though this 6 hour video, I truly hope to see better content!

  19. And the greek philosopher and scientist? The martyr? She is missing here. Not to mention quite a few more ladies in history. Still, thank you, a good job, although a bit focused on the macbre and conflict.

  20. 😂😂😂woe, Billy, lemme jump in here! This is the Egyptian History from the historical age of the 1500 (s) when the American Stock exchange was activated, lemme make you aware, black Egyptians were not included in this part of history! FYI, Slavery!!!

  21. I believe that Elizabet Bathory was a victim of men who craved greed and power. I'm also beginning to believe that Vlad the Impaler was not the person that the history books proclaim. Humans have been capable all through history of atrocities brought on by power and greed. They will stoop to any level to acquire what they value most.