The Binge List: British Monarchy Edition

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TV/STREAMING

There are infinite bingeworthy series and movies to explore the captivating history of the British monarchy. It is our favorite form of edutainment!

These series and movies are legitimately badass (yes, we are saying badass while discussing period pieces). Another perk is that we’ve become particularly good at Jeopardy by watching them.
Although not all shows are 100% historically accurate (yes, they use creative license at times), they are close enough to satisfy us.

We arranged these series and movies by period so you can watch them in historical order. Please note that streaming availability changes frequently and may vary by region. Now, without further ado… It’s binge time, British monarchy style.

WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD

THE KING

Where to Watch: Netflix

In “The King”, Hal (Timothée Chalamet), the wayward and reluctant heir to the English crown, spends his days avoiding the politics and responsibilities of court. But when his father, King Henry IV, dies, Hal is thrust into power as Henry V, inheriting a fractured kingdom and a legacy of unrest.

Unprepared for the weight of rule, Henry must learn to navigate scheming advisors, fragile alliances, and an escalating conflict with France. As he faces manipulation from all sides, the young king is forced to confront the brutality of war, the cost of loyalty, and the sacrifices required to hold a throne. Torn between the man he was and the monarch he must become, Henry’s journey is one of transformation—where the crown’s burden demands both courage and cunning.

THE WHITE QUEEN


Where to Watch: Starz, Philo, The Roku Channel (free w/ ads), Spectrum On Demand, Starz Apple TV Channel, Starz Roku Premium Channel, Starz Amazon Channel
Seasons: 1 Episodes: 10

“The White Queen” is based on Philippa Gregory’s novel, the first book in a series that tells the story of the War of the Roses, aka The Cousins’ War. It’s 1464, and war has ravaged England for nearly a decade, sparked by the feud between cousins from the Houses of York and Lancaster. Both sides had a legitimate claim to the throne based on the Plantagenet blood running through their veins. And both sides have armies ready to fight for their legitimate kings.

After years of civil unrest, and with the guidance of “Kingmaker” Lord Warwick (James Frain), the youthful and strong Edward IV (Max Irons), heir to the House of York, wins his place upon the throne, removing the mentally unstable Lancastrian King Henry VI from power.

Edward IV’s hold on the crown is tentative. The war for power continues within the kingdom and, most interestingly, within the houses of York and Lancaster. Even Edward’s brothers make moves against him: the infamous Richard III (Aneurin Barnard) and George, Duke of Clarence (David Oakes), also desire the throne. A failed kidnap attempt on Edward proves that nobody is safe when it comes to holding the crown.

Unfortunately for Lord Warwick, his plan to control the young Edward IV during his reign is disrupted when Edward falls in love with the beautiful Lancastrian commoner and widow, Elizabeth Woodville (Rebecca Ferguson).

Elizabeth becomes Edward’s partner in every way; she is the mother of the heirs to the throne, and he consults her on matters of politics and the court. Together, Edward and Elizabeth had ten children (six of whom outlived him) and sat on the throne together in a show of collaborative power over the kingdom.

This series shows us one thing: There are no rules when it comes to gaining control of the kingdom.

THE WHITE PRINCESS

Where to Watch: Starz, Philo, BritBox, The Roku Channel (free w/ ads), Spectrum On Demand, Starz Apple TV Channel, Starz Amazon Channel, BritBox Apple TV Channel, BritBox Amazon Channel
Seasons: 1 Episodes: 8

“The White Princess” is a sweeping historical drama set in the turbulent aftermath of the Wars of the Roses. The series centers on Elizabeth of York, the beautiful and politically astute daughter of the late King Edward IV, who is forced to marry her family’s enemy, Henry Tudor—now crowned Henry VII—to secure peace for a war-weary England.

Their marriage, meant to unite the warring houses of York and Lancaster, is a fragile alliance built on mistrust, grief, and lingering resentment. Elizabeth must navigate the dangerous waters of Tudor court politics, where her fiercely protective mother, Elizabeth Woodville, and Henry’s ambitious mother, Margaret Beaufort, wage a quiet war for influence over the young couple and the kingdom’s future.

As rumors swirl of a York heir who may have survived, threats to Henry’s rule multiply, forcing Elizabeth to choose between loyalty to her husband and allegiance to her bloodline. Caught between love, duty, and the ever-present risk of betrayal, she becomes both a pawn and a player in a ruthless game for power at the dawn of the Tudor dynasty.

THE SPANISH PRINCESS

Where to Watch: Starz, Philo, The Roku Channel (free w/ ads), Spectrum On Demand, Starz Apple TV Channel, Starz Roku Premium Channel, Starz Amazon Channel
Seasons: 1 Episodes:

“The Spanish Princess” is the third installment of the Philippa Gregory miniseries and focuses on the Tudor royal court’s melodrama and manipulation.

The teenage, strong-willed Princess Catherine of Aragon is the daughter of the most ruthless royals in Europe, Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain, warriors for their nation. Princess Catherine is sent to England to marry Prince Arthur, creating an alliance between the two countries and paying a large bride price that King Henry VII desperately needs to maintain control of his kingdom.

Catherine is promised in marriage to the English Prince Arthur. But when Arthur dies shortly after their wedding, and her mother dies shortly after that, Princess Catherine finds herself lost in a foreign country and comes to terms with the fact that her assumed fate of sitting on the throne as a queen is lost. That is, until the young and charismatic Prince Henry sets his sights on Catherine to be his queen.

Prince Henry, in order to maintain the alliance with Spain and the riches bestowed upon the Tudors by Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, petitioned the Pope for a papal dispensation to marry his brother’s wife. Catherine adamantly denies losing her chastity to Arthur. This fact becomes important during the “The Tudors” series.

THE TUDORS

Where to Watch: Amazon Prime Video, Paramount+ (Premium), fuboTV, Paramount+ Amazon Channel, Paramount+ Roku Premium Channel, Spectrum On Demand
Seasons: 4 Episodes: 38

The Tudors is royal chaos at its most bingeable: a glossy, scandal-soaked period drama about King Henry VIII and the beautiful, brutal mess he created at court. It has everything you want in a monarchy series: power plays, doomed romances, political betrayals, shifting alliances, and enough ego-driven decisions to keep England in a constant state of crisis.

What makes the show so addictive is the way it mixes prestige period detail with pure compulsive-TV energy. The costumes are lush, the court is glamorous and dangerous, and every conversation feels like it could end in seduction, exile, or execution. It is not trying to be a dry history lesson, and that is exactly why it works so well as edutainment.

If you’re building a British monarchy binge in historical order, The Tudors is an essential stop. It gives you the Tudor-era core: Henry VIII’s marriages, succession panic, religious upheaval, and the kind of high-stakes palace drama that still defines royal storytelling on screen.

READ THE CULT STATUS REVIEW OF THE TUDORS HERE

WOLF HALL

Wolf Hall is a Tudor court drama with a slow burn and a knife behind its back. Instead of playing the palace like a scandal carousel, it leans into strategy, silence, and the kind of political tension that makes every conversation feel dangerous. The series follows Thomas Cromwell as he navigates Henry VIII’s court, where loyalty is temporary, power is theatrical, and survival depends on reading the room before anyone else does.

What makes it so compelling is the restraint. The show trusts the audience to feel the weight of a glance, a pause, a shift in favor. It is rich and atmospheric without being showy, and the tension comes from intelligence, ambition, and fear rather than constant spectacle. If The Tudors is the glamorous royal meltdown, Wolf Hall is the precision-engineered power game happening underneath it.

BECOMING ELIZABETH

Becoming Elizabeth gives you the pre-crown years, which means the myth is still forming and the danger feels personal. This is Elizabeth before she becomes the icon, when she is young, brilliant, vulnerable, and trapped in a court where every alliance comes with a hidden motive. It turns succession politics into emotional suspense, making it instantly bingeable.

The show’s strength is how tense and human it feels. Everyone is circling power, everyone is calculating, and no one is fully safe. It captures the instability of a royal household in transition, where family, ambition, and survival blur together. If you love watching a future legend take shape under pressure, this one hits.

ELIZABETH

Where to Watch: Rent/Buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Fandango At Home

The daughter of King Henry VIII and the beheaded Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth I learned very early in her life that marriage was a prison from which you could not escape other than by death. Anne Boleyn was put on the block, and when she was just a child, Henry publicly declared Elizabeth illegitimate, denying her place in the line of succession. She also had a long line of stepmothers. Her father had six wives in total.

Before his death, Henry reinstated Elizabeth as heir to the throne behind her siblings. Her unstable childhood and uncertainty about her future led Elizabeth to resist the idea of marriage. Also, at that point in time, a Queen would have to give all of her power to her King-Consort, rendering her role useless. This is something that the headstrong Elizabeth I would not allow.

Many urged Queen Elizabeth, known as the “Virgin Queen,” to marry for international power and alliances, but Elizabeth remained devoted to her country. Her reign in the 16th century was so successful that it became identified as “The Golden Age.”

ELIZABETH: THE GOLDEN AGE

Where to Watch: Rent/Buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Fandango At Home

This movie won the Oscar for Best Costume Design, and Cate Blanchett continues to channel the female powerhouse that was Queen Elizabeth I. In her later years, Elizabeth became known for wearing over-the-top costumes with her signature red wig and flamboyant white makeup. This became her signature look.

Her signature look showed her enemies and consorts that not only was she a formidable Queen, but she was also a Queen chosen by God to serve the great land of England. Her look was dramatic and would intimidate her court and the people of England.

The king of Spain’s hatred of Elizabeth I stemmed from his dislike of the Protestant, unmarried Queen. A devout Catholic, the King of Spain declared war on England and built a fleet of state-of-the-art ships to attack England on her shores. However, like many others, he made the mistake of underestimating Queen Elizabeth I’s power and intelligence.

MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS

Where to Watch: Rent/Buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Fandango At Home

“Mary Queen of Scots” stars Saoirse Ronan as Mary Stuart and Margot Robbie as Queen Elizabeth I. The film tells the story of Mary’s return to Scotland to reclaim her throne, igniting a fierce rivalry with her cousin Elizabeth, the mighty Queen of England. Caught between political intrigue, religious conflict, and personal ambition, both queens must navigate betrayal, loyalty, and danger as they vie for power in a turbulent era. Their intertwined fates shape the course of history in this gripping tale of courage and rivalry.

THE YOUNG VICTORIA

Where to Watch: BritBox, BritBox Apple TV Channel (plus rent/buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Fandango At Home)

The majority of European royalty today can be traced back to Queen Victoria and King Albert. Their multiple offspring married princes and princesses throughout Europe, securing their position of power among the royals.

In this film, the young and inexperienced Queen Victoria finds her strength in the love of Albert, the handsome prince who quickly captures her heart. Based on their loving relationship and the youthful experiences of England’s longest-serving monarch (second to Queen Elizabeth II), this film is a grand tale of romance, intrigue, and a lust for power.

Following Prince Albert’s death at a young age, Queen Victoria continued mourning, isolating herself, and would only wear black, the color of mourning. She wore black for the rest of her life to honor her loving husband. They were soulmates, a rarity in royal marriages, especially before the modern age, when marriages were arranged, not chosen.

VICTORIA

Where to Watch: Netflix, PBS, PBS Masterpiece Amazon Channel, WETA+, KQED (free w/ ads)
Seasons: 3 Episodes: 25

“Victoria” is a richly detailed BBC miniseries that chronicles the early years of Queen Victoria’s reign, beginning with her unexpected ascent to the throne at just 18 years old. Thrust into a world of political maneuvering and court intrigue, the young queen must quickly learn to assert her authority in a male-dominated monarchy while grappling with personal struggles and public expectations.

The series explores Victoria’s evolving relationship with her trusted advisor Lord Melbourne and her passionate romance with Prince Albert, whose partnership becomes central to her reign and legacy. Against the backdrop of a changing Britain, Victoria faces challenges that test her resolve, from family conflicts to national crises, all while growing into one of history’s most iconic and influential monarchs.

THE KING’S SPEECH

Where to Watch: BritBox Apple TV Channel, MovieSphere+ Amazon Channel, The Roku Channel (free w/ ads) (plus rent/buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Fandango At Home)

The problem: Bertie (Colin Firth) has had a lifelong, debilitating stutter that prevents him from addressing large crowds. Now, as the reluctant king following his brother’s abdication of the throne to marry American Wallis Simpson, and with England on the brink of joining World War II, the country desperately needed a strong, effective leader who could communicate with the English people.

His wife, Elizabeth (Helena Bonham Carter), arranges for her husband to see an eccentric speech therapist, Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush). Lionel and Bertie pursue an unorthodox course of treatment, forming a loyal bond along the way. With Logue’s support, Bertie overcomes his stammer and delivers a radio address worthy of a king that inspires his subjects and unites them to go to battle.

The King’s Speech won four Oscars, including “Best Picture” and “Best Actor.”

THE CROWN

Where to Watch: Netflix
Seasons: 6 Episodes: 60

“The Crown” on Netflix is an expansive, critically acclaimed drama series that traces the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II from her early days as a young princess to her long and often turbulent tenure as monarch. The show delves deep into the personal sacrifices, political dilemmas, and complex relationships that define her rule, portraying the challenges of balancing tradition with modernity in a rapidly changing world.

Throughout multiple seasons, The Crown explores key historical events that shaped the second half of the 20th century, including political scandals, international conflicts, and shifts within the British Empire. It also intimately depicts the Queen’s relationships with her family—her husband Prince Philip, her children, and her Prime Ministers—revealing the emotional toll and isolation that often accompany the responsibilities of leadership.

The series combines rich historical detail with nuanced performances and lavish production values to offer a compelling portrait of a woman burdened by duty yet determined to protect the monarchy’s legacy, making it both a personal drama and a sweeping epic about power, identity, and resilience.

SPENCER

Spencer is a royal drama filmed like a panic attack in couture. It takes a familiar public figure and drops you inside the pressure, ritual, and emotional surveillance of royal life, where every room feels staged, and every movement feels observed. The result is intense, stylized, and deeply unsettling in the best possible way.

This is not a broad history of monarchy; it is a psychological portrait, and that is what makes it so powerful. The film turns tradition into atmosphere and image management into a kind of haunting. It is beautiful, brittle, and suffocating, with a constant sense that the walls are closing in.

THE QUEEN

Where to Watch: Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads (plus free on Kanopy and Hoopla; rent/buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, Fandango At Home)

The Queen is a 2006 biographical drama film that depicts the royal family’s cold response to the death of Princess Diana. Princess Diana and her boyfriend, Dodi Fayed, died on August 31, 1997, in a car crash in a Paris tunnel.

The English people, who are notorious for keeping a stiff upper lip, expressed extreme sadness over the loss of Diana. They were also angered that the Royal Family did not share a more emotional, loving acknowledgment of the death of “The People’s Princess”. This nickname, coined by Prime Minister Tony Blair (Martin Sheen), became the name that defined her legacy.

As was her temperament, Queen Elizabeth II (Helen Mirren) stayed tight-lipped regarding Diana’s death. Although the Brits are known for keeping calm and carrying on, the people of England came out by the thousands to honor the life of their favorite princess.

The death of Diana ushered in a new era for England. Her loving and charitable personality opened up the hearts of her supporters. Queen Elizabeth II was manhandled by the press, who were awaiting her statement. The press also analyzed her behavior as cold and blank.

Dame Helen Mirren shows the different sides of the Queen in the intriguing story behind one of the most notorious tragedies of our time. The Queen takes you inside the private chambers of the Royal Family for a captivating look at a vulnerable human being in her darkest hour, as a nation grieves for its princess, waiting to hear what she will say next.

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