At the start of the clip depicting Buckingham Palace the room shown isn't in the palace, thats two palaces featured whose rooms are not part of their interiors
just to be clear, the royal palace in Brussels is NOT on the site of the Coudenberg Palace. It's a little ways off from where the Coudenberg would've been. When the Coudenberg burned down, Charles Alexander of Lorraine attempted to rebuild a new palace on the site but there was no money in the budget to even clear the ruins (which stood until the 1760s/1770s IIRC). The current royal palace's design was started under Maria Christine of Austria and her husband the duke of Teschen, then was modified when Napoléon came to town, then was basically completely rebuilt under Leopold I. The problem was that it was never built to actually be "liveable", everyone from Leopold's wife, Queen Louise, to visitors complained about the palace's gigantic empty rooms and the general "cheap" feel of the interior (when compared with other royal residences)
I assume this will be followed by a video revealing the costs of housing democratically elected leaders. Only seeing what astronomical costs go into that would paint a truly balanced picture. Monarchies often possess the homes in which they reside, whilst housing democratic leaders solely on the taxpayer's dime can actually cost immeasurably more.
Karl XI is Karl the Eleventh, not Nineth. That gold room is not in Drottningholm Palace, but in the Catherine Palace in Pushkin, Russia. There is an estimate for the value of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo of about $852.5 BILLION!!! This is due to the value of its land in a city with off-the-charts land prices. In the 1980's, it was even estimated to be worth more than the whole state of California.
Who pays the taxes and the upkeep of the exterior facades and interior as well as restore the irreplaceable 17th and 18th century furnishings, paintings, crystal chandeliers, Sterling cutlery and 250 year old porcelain dinner settings embossed with the royal cipher etc. of all these palaces which must be in the 100's of millions per year?
Untrustworthy and inaccurate. It shows the main gate of Seoul's Kyungbok Palace as part of the Japanese Imperial Palace. Obviously whoever made this POC didn't bother to check their own production for accuracy. A total time waster. Annoying music too.
At the start of the clip depicting Buckingham Palace the room shown isn't in the palace, thats two palaces featured whose rooms are not part of their interiors
Good video.
Those estimated values are at best random guesses.
all fake
I like it
just to be clear, the royal palace in Brussels is NOT on the site of the Coudenberg Palace. It's a little ways off from where the Coudenberg would've been. When the Coudenberg burned down, Charles Alexander of Lorraine attempted to rebuild a new palace on the site but there was no money in the budget to even clear the ruins (which stood until the 1760s/1770s IIRC). The current royal palace's design was started under Maria Christine of Austria and her husband the duke of Teschen, then was modified when Napoléon came to town, then was basically completely rebuilt under Leopold I. The problem was that it was never built to actually be "liveable", everyone from Leopold's wife, Queen Louise, to visitors complained about the palace's gigantic empty rooms and the general "cheap" feel of the interior (when compared with other royal residences)
I assume this will be followed by a video revealing the costs of housing democratically elected leaders. Only seeing what astronomical costs go into that would paint a truly balanced picture. Monarchies often possess the homes in which they reside, whilst housing democratic leaders solely on the taxpayer's dime can actually cost immeasurably more.
Apart from a couple of misreadings of regnal numbers the video is interesting.
Just to be clear. The 18th century is the 1700s.
When you talk about a royal palace you show member of a different monarchy
Are you showing Matsumoto Castle as the Japanese imperial palace?
The video was fairly ok, but it was hard to catch everything as the narrator was talking very fast.
Karl XI is Karl the Eleventh, not Nineth. That gold room is not in Drottningholm Palace, but in the Catherine Palace in Pushkin, Russia. There is an estimate for the value of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo of about $852.5 BILLION!!! This is due to the value of its land in a city with off-the-charts land prices. In the 1980's, it was even estimated to be worth more than the whole state of California.
You're correct the gold room displayed is in the Catherine Palace in Russia.
Half of the interior footage comes from the Royal Palace of Brussels 😂
Zeimlich willkürliche Zusammenstellung, bei der oft Text und Bild nicht übereinstimmen.
Your show pictures of Palace Noordeinde in Den Haag (The Hague) which has nothing to do with the Palace at the Dam in Amsterdam.
Gret show. But you saif Ninth where the Roman numerals said eleven.
And you saif saif
Who pays the taxes and the upkeep of the exterior facades and interior as well as restore the irreplaceable 17th and 18th century furnishings, paintings, crystal chandeliers, Sterling cutlery and 250 year old porcelain dinner settings embossed with the royal cipher etc. of all these palaces which must be in the 100's of millions per year?
Versailles is estimated 51 billions!
No 1.000.000 billions lol
So many images are incorrect
Le son est mauvais
The editing is way too hectic. Impossible to watch.
Narration is below Par.
Untrustworthy and inaccurate. It shows the main gate of Seoul's Kyungbok Palace as part of the Japanese Imperial Palace. Obviously whoever made this POC didn't bother to check their own production for accuracy. A total time waster. Annoying music too.
The Belgian royal palace is better!
Formerly a dutch palace. It becfame belgian after 1830
Fake news