Crown – Listorati https://listorati.com Fascinating facts and lists, bizarre, wonderful, and fun Mon, 18 May 2026 06:00:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://listorati.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/listorati-512x512-1.png Crown – Listorati https://listorati.com 32 32 215494684 10 Royal Mistresses Who Captivated Their Kings and Courts https://listorati.com/10-royal-mistresses-captivated-kings-courts/ https://listorati.com/10-royal-mistresses-captivated-kings-courts/#respond Mon, 18 May 2026 06:00:50 +0000 https://listorati.com/?p=30995

When you think of royalty, you might picture grand ceremonies and arranged marriages, but behind many thrones lurked captivating women who wielded power, charm, and sometimes scandal. These royal mistresses not only satisfied personal desires but also shaped politics, art, and the very course of history.

Why royal mistresses mattered

In courts where marriage was a diplomatic contract, kings often turned to mistresses for affection, counsel, and a break from protocol. Their influence ranged from behind‑the‑scenes intrigue to open patronage of the arts, leaving legacies that survive in paintings, literature, and the occasional edict.

10 Odette de Champdivers

Portrait of Odette de Champdivers, a royal mistress, with Valentine of Milan

At just 17, Odette de Champdivers captured the attention of the troubled French monarch Charles VI. The king, plagued by paranoid delusions – at one point even believing he was made of glass – oscillated between bouts of violence toward his queen Isabella of Bavaria and moments of fragile affection. Medieval physicians argued that “releasing one’s seed” was essential for health, prompting Isabella to tolerate Odette for her own safety.

Odette’s intimacy with Charles earned her the affectionate nickname “Little Queen,” and the pair even produced a daughter together. The king ensured both mistress and child were provided for in his will. Yet after Charles VI’s death, France descended into civil war, and Odette was pressed into service as a spy for his son, the future Charles VII.

Details of Odette’s later life remain elusive, but her allure inspired countless paintings and even a historical novel by Honoré de Balzac, cementing her place in the romantic imagination.

9 Agnès Sorel

Jean Fouquet's Madonna painting featuring Agnès Sorel, a royal mistress

Agnès Sorel burst onto the French court in her early twenties, a golden‑haired, blue‑eyed beauty who quickly enthralled the 40‑year‑old Charles VII. Her daring wardrobe – reputedly so revealing it displayed her nipples – caused a scandal that rippled through aristocratic circles.

Rumors swirled that Agnès meddled in state affairs, and when she fell ill and died after delivering her fourth child, many whispered that she had been poisoned. Suspicion fell on Charles’s rebellious son, the future Louis XI. Modern examinations of her skeleton suggest mercury poisoning, a common medieval remedy that could have been fatal.

Charles mourned her loss deeply, yet he promptly replaced her with her 14‑year‑old cousin Antoinette Maignelais. Agnès endures in art as the subject of Jean Fouquet’s famous Madonna painting, where she appears as a fashionable, half‑exposed Mary.

8 Gabrielle d’Estrees

Gabrielle d’Estrees in Louvre painting, showing her as a royal mistress

Among Henry IV’s staggering 56 documented mistresses, Gabrielle d’Estrees was the sole woman he remained faithful to. Like Agnès, she is immortalized in a Louvre masterpiece that depicts her bathing with her sister.

Gabrielle’s influence was decidedly political. She is credited with persuading the Protestant Henry to reconvert to Catholicism and to issue the Edict of Nantes, granting religious freedoms to French Protestants. She bore Henry three children, all later legitimized, and Henry even petitioned the Pope to annul his marriage to Marguerite of Valois so he could wed Gabrielle.

Her untimely death after giving birth to a stillborn son sparked accusations of poisoning. Though Henry never married her, he gave her a funeral befitting a queen, underscoring the depth of his devotion.

7 Alice Perrers

Alice Perrers, the influential royal mistress of Edward III

Alice Perrers entered the English court as a 15‑year‑old lady‑in‑waiting to Queen Philippa, only to catch the eye of the 50‑year‑old Edward III. After Philippa’s death, Edward lavished Alice with gifts, even repurposing his late wife’s clothing and jewels for her.

As Edward aged, Alice’s sway grew. She sat beside him at council meetings and even took a seat on the bench at Westminster, where she whispered advice to royal judges. Parliament, scandalized by her interference, banished her, but a later session declared the exile unconstitutional, allowing her return.

Legend claims that after Edward’s 1377 stroke, Alice lingered at his bedside, waiting until everyone else left before pilfering his rings and gold chain. Whether true or myth, she retired to her Essex estates, where she died in the winter of 1400‑01.

6 Barbara Villiers

Barbara Villiers, favored royal mistress of Charles II

Charles II counted thirteen mistresses, but Barbara Villiers stood out as his favorite. The married beauty survived a bout of smallpox without losing her famed looks, yet courtiers branded her a whore. Charles allegedly boasted that “she hath all the tricks of Ariten” – a 17th‑century sex manual.

Barbara forced queen Catherine of Braganza to accept her as a lady of the bedchamber, despite the queen’s protests. She bore six children, five of whom Charles acknowledged, before the king eventually moved on. Undeterred, Barbara pursued further affairs, even embroiling herself in a bigamy scandal when her second husband turned out to be already wed.

Even on his deathbed, Charles asked his brother James II to treat Barbara kindly. She lived to 68, though dropsy eventually claimed the once‑glamorous visage.

5 Nell Gwynn

Portrait of Nell Gwynn, comedic actress and royal mistress of Charles II

“Pray, good people, be civil—I am the Protestant whore,” quipped Nell Gwynn when a mob mistook her coach for that of the king’s Catholic mistress. The daughter of a brothel‑keeper, possibly a child prostitute, was “discovered” at 15 selling oranges outside Drury Lane, where actor Charles Hart fell for her and trained her for the stage. She soon became London’s leading comedic actress.

Though illiterate and not classically beautiful, Nell’s wit and down‑to‑earth nature endeared her to the public and to Charles II, who appreciated that she asked for nothing political. She bore the king two sons, one of whom died young. As Charles lay dying, he reputedly urged his brother James II, “let not poor Nelly starve.”

Nell survived Charles by only two years, succumbing in her thirties to an illness that left one side of her body paralyzed.

4 Diane de Poitiers

Diane de Poitiers, Renaissance royal mistress of Henry II

Diane de Poitiers epitomized the Renaissance cougar. At 32, she was hired to tutor the 12‑year‑old future Henry II, and six years later they became lovers while Henry was married to the unattractive Catherine de’ Medici.

Diane wielded quasi‑royal power: she penned official letters on Henry’s behalf, signing them “HenriDiane.” Her jealousy was legendary, yet Catherine could do nothing until Henry fell in a jousting tournament in 1559. After his death, Catherine seized the lavish Château de Chenonceau, a gift Henry had bestowed upon Diane.

Centuries later, forensic analysis revealed Diane’s bones bore signs of chronic gold intoxication, likely from Renaissance elixirs that mixed gold with mercury. The very substances that gave her porcelain skin may have also weakened her health.

3 Maria, the Countess Walewska

Countess Maria Walewska, Napoleon's royal mistress

Born in 1786 to a once‑wealthy Polish family, Maria was pressured at 16 to marry the 70‑year‑old Count Walewska to restore her family’s fortunes. At a 1806 New Year’s Eve gala, she crossed paths with Napoleon, who wooed her with passionate letters and jewels. She rebuffed his advances until he hinted that a liaison might improve Poland’s standing.

Pregnant with Napoleon’s child, Maria thrilled the emperor, who had long yearned for an heir. Napoleon soon divorced the post‑menopausal Josephine and married Marie Louise, ending his affair with Maria. She later offered to join him in exile, but he declined.

Maria divorced Walewska, married one of Napoleon’s generals, and died at 31 from kidney disease. Her heart rests in Paris’s Père Lachaise Cemetery, while her body returned to Poland.

2 Madame de Pompadour

Madame de Pompadour, influential royal mistress of Louis XV

Jeanne‑Antoinette Poisson, born in 1721, was steered toward greatness after a nine‑year‑old visit to a fortune teller who predicted she would “reign over a king’s heart.” Her mother ensured she received a top‑tier education, including voice lessons from a Paris opera star.

At a masked ball, the widowed Louis XV fell for Jeanne‑Antoinette, installing her in a secret apartment above his at Versailles. There she cultivated an immense library and became a patron of luminaries such as Voltaire, Montesquieu, and Diderot.

Although their affair lasted only five years, she remained Louis’s confidante, even interviewing young women for potential court positions. Blamed for France’s disastrous Seven Years’ War, she nonetheless retained the king’s loyalty until her death from pulmonary failure at 46. Madame de Pompadour’s legacy lives on in an iconic upswept hairstyle and a cameo in the 2006 “Doctor Who” episode “The Girl in the Fireplace.”

1 Lillie Langtry

Lillie Langtry, famed actress and royal mistress of the Prince of Wales

Lillie Langtry dazzled the 19th‑century stage and became a magnet for millionaires and royalty, most famously the married Prince of Wales (future Edward VII). “Bertie” introduced her to his mother, Queen Victoria, before ending the affair after she playfully placed ice down his back at a party.

Rumors swirled that a child she bore might be fathered by Prince Louis of Battenberg, prompting high‑society rejection. Oscar Wilde, who penned “Lady Windermere’s Fan” as an ode to Lillie, urged her to pursue acting. She achieved fame on both sides of the Atlantic, even prompting Texas judge “Judge” Roy Bean to rename his town Langtry after seeing her portrait.

Later, she married a man 19 years her junior, retired to Monaco, authored a best‑selling autobiography, and famously broke the bank at Monte Carlo. She died at 76 after a bout of bronchitis, and rests in the churchyard of St Saviour’s on Jersey.

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8 Reasons British Influence Still Rules the United States https://listorati.com/8-reasons-british-influence-usa-control/ https://listorati.com/8-reasons-british-influence-usa-control/#respond Fri, 23 Feb 2024 02:33:41 +0000 https://listorati.com/8-reasons-the-british-crown-still-controls-the-united-states/

Before we dive in, it’s worth noting that the following 8 reasons british influence supposedly still pulls the strings in the United States sit squarely on the fringe of conspiracy theory. Most scholars dismiss them as wild speculation, yet they weave a tangled narrative that’s oddly captivating.

8 Reasons British Overview

1 The “Secret” 1604 Meeting In Greenwich, London

Portrait of King James I illustrating 8 reasons british conspiracy context

The journey begins with the Virginia Company, a joint‑stock venture that sprouted from a hush‑hush gathering in Greenwich, London back in 1604. The agenda? To sniff out the fresh opportunities of a continent that would later become the United States, and to line the pockets of a select British elite. This secretive conclave also drew in the early forerunners of societies that would morph into the Freemasons.

According to the lore, King James I himself was on the guest list, holding the lion’s share of the venture’s capital. His hefty investment was meant to expand the Crown’s reach by seizing new lands and extracting resources, all in the name of swelling royal coffers. Notably, this reference to “the Crown” isn’t about the modern royal family but a different power structure that the conspiracists will unpack later.

If the whispered accounts hold water, the Greenwich summit birthed the Virginia Company, which promptly launched two expeditions. One party touched down at Jamestown in 1607—named after King James I—while the other set sail for Cape Cod in 1620. Both crews promptly claimed ownership of the territories they “discovered,” setting the stage for centuries of alleged British sway.

2 What Is It?

Illustration of the Crown at Temple Bar for 8 reasons british article

When most people hear “The Crown,” they picture the British monarchy. In this narrative, however, the term points to the Crown at Temple Bar, the symbolic seat of power nestled in the City of London where lawmakers and high‑rolling bankers pull the levers. Conspiracy enthusiasts argue that this Crown functions as a central hub for a shadowy elite that steers global affairs.

In the early‑1600s, the Crown grew nervous about the Spanish Empire’s expanding grip on South America. As Spanish language and Catholic faith spread southward, English elites feared losing influence in the northern hemisphere. Their answer? A pre‑emptive push to dominate the northern territories before the Spanish could lay claim, thereby safeguarding the Crown’s future profits.

3 A Law Unto Itself?

City of London skyline representing 8 reasons british claim

The City of London, a one‑square‑mile enclave right in the heart of the capital, operates under a legal framework that’s practically its own sovereign entity. After William the Conqueror secured the area in 1067, the City negotiated a unique set of freedoms and laws, effectively becoming a micro‑state within a state—an early prototype of modern banking and debt‑financing.

Fast‑forward to today, the District of Columbia mirrors this autonomy. The Federal Reserve, perched in Washington, enjoys a separate legal status much like the City of London, allowing it to function as a quasi‑governmental corporation distinct from the broader United States.

Adding intrigue, a sizable chunk of the Founding Fathers were Freemasons, and many doubled as lawyers for the Crown. Their presence in the nascent United States allegedly ensured that decisions about land, resources, and taxation were tipped in favor of British‑linked interests.

4 Central To The Entire Conspiracy

One of the most eyebrow‑raising chapters in this saga is the Act of 1871. Conspiracy circles claim that the legislation wasn’t merely a bureaucratic reform; it deliberately split the nation into two entities: the United States of America (the country) and the United States (a corporation). The corporate entity, anchored in the District of Columbia, allegedly operates under its own government—the Federal Government—which is distinct from the “real” United States.

Official histories suggest the Virginia Company’s grip dissolved after the Revolutionary War, leaving the fledgling nation free from British rule and bankrupt. Yet the Act of 1871 supposedly opened the floodgates for bankers and private firms to set up shop in D.C., profiting off the nation’s debt by compelling the United States to borrow from a reserve—much like today’s Federal Reserve system.

Some researchers even go so far as to argue that the modern Federal Reserve is nothing more than the Virginia Company rebranded. If that’s true, the United States would still be under a form of British control—not through crowns and flags, but via a massive, perpetual financial obligation.

5 The Maritime Law Claims

Diagram of maritime law concept in 8 reasons british narrative

Perhaps the most head‑scratching claim involves maritime—or admiralty—law. Proponents assert that while the United States’ court system officially runs on common law (the “law of the land”), federal cases in the District of Columbia actually fall under maritime law, a set of statutes governing the high seas.

In this view, federal courts operate under a legal regime that sits outside the standard American judicial hierarchy, echoing the legal structures that existed during British rule. If you buy into the theory, every federal case is judged by a maritime code rather than the Constitution‑based common law most citizens assume.

Supporters argue that this legal sleight‑of‑hand enables a hidden layer of control, allowing the Crown‑linked elite to manipulate outcomes without public scrutiny. Critics, however, label the whole notion as a twisted interpretation of legal history, dismissing it as nonsense.

It’s worth noting that many scholars and legal experts flat‑out reject these maritime‑law allegations, insisting that the United States’ judiciary functions squarely within the bounds of constitutional law.

6 Ties To Ancient Bloodlines And Secret Societies

Founding Fathers portrait linked to 8 reasons british bloodline theory

Another thread in the tapestry points to ancient bloodlines and secret societies. The claim is that a ruling elite, whose lineage stretches back to the great empires of Rome, Egypt, and even Sumer, has quietly steered world events for millennia. This elite allegedly intermarried with European royalty and, later, with the American Founding Fathers.

The theory goes further, suggesting that more than 40 U.S. presidents can trace their ancestry to these age‑old dynasties. If true, the Virginia Company would be just one node in a sprawling network of power that transcends national borders and centuries.

Such a sweeping narrative helps explain why many researchers find the idea of a hidden global elite so alluring—it offers a single, dramatic explanation for the complex web of geopolitical and economic forces shaping our world.

7 Intriguing Clues In The Names

Proponents also point to what they see as hidden messages embedded in everyday names. A favorite example is the District of Columbia itself. Some argue that the name “Columbia” is a subtle nod to the Babylonian goddess Semiramis, also known as Venus Columba. The similarity between “Columba” and “Columbia” is presented as a clue that the capital’s very identity is rooted in ancient mysticism.

According to this line of thought, the United States capital is essentially the “District of Venus Columba,” a modern echo of a Babylonian deity. This, they claim, is evidence that the founders deliberately encoded secret symbolism into the nation’s geography, reinforcing the notion of an underlying, concealed power structure.

While most historians shrug off these linguistic coincidences as fanciful, the idea persists among conspiracy circles, feeding the belief that the truth is hidden in plain sight, just waiting for a curious mind to decode it.

8 The Words Of George Bush

George H.W. Bush quote image for 8 reasons british discussion

One of the more notorious anecdotes centers on a quote attributed to George H. W. Bush Sr. He supposedly warned, “If the American people knew what we had done, they would string us up from the lamp posts.” The line is often cited as an admission that a tiny cabal controls the masses.

Interpretations vary wildly. Some see the remark as a veiled reference to the very conspiracies outlined above—perhaps a nod to secret banking, covert operations, or hidden bloodlines. Others think it merely reflects the political turbulence of the era, touching on scandals ranging from oil conspiracies to the JFK assassination.

Whether Bush was hinting at a grand, hidden design or simply venting frustration, the quote fuels speculation that a shadowy elite pulls the strings behind the scenes, ready to be exposed if the public ever discovers the full truth.

In the end, the quote stands as a tantalizing breadcrumb for those hunting for proof that the United States remains under an unseen British‑linked grip.

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