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1Sometimes a historical figure is twisted from their original roots into something more grand or vile, as a HistoricalHeroUpgrade or HistoricalVillainUpgrade.
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3But sometimes a story isn't interested in either of these. It neither wants them to be lionized or necessarily vilified, but at the same time it can't resist taking some of the shine off of them. While this could easily be just an attempt to humanize these figures and try to be more historically accurate, it's often far too easy to go that extra step and stuff a bit of StrawLoser in there. The result is a Historical Downgrade: while either a heroic or villainous shift could be said to be an increase in status, this take is definitely a lessening of stature no matter where the figure started out.
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5Those who have been lauded by history are most often made the target of this, but those who got the short end of the stick aren't immune... especially when their villainous portrayal [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain is more pathetic than intimidating]].
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7Extinct animals have been hit with this trope too; see DumbDinos and DoofyDodo for two of the most common targets.
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9Compare HistoricalVillainDowngrade. Contrast HistoricalBadassUpgrade.
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11See HistoricalRelationshipOverhaul for other changes a HistoricalDomainCharacter may receive.
12----
13!!Examples:
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17[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
18* UsefulNotes/KingJohnOfEngland got this in ''WesternAnimation/RobinHood1973'', especially early on, where he's so childlike and sad that he can't properly be called a villain, he's just a pathetic loser for kids to laugh at. [[NotSoHarmlessVillain But then he gets serious]]...
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21[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
22* ''Film/{{Braveheart}}'': For all the real Edward II of England's faults, he was certainly no coward. At the Battle of Bannockburn, he had to be ''dragged'' away because he wanted to keep fighting even after it became clear the day was lost. Here, however, he's notably craven.
23* ''Film/TheDeathOfStalin'':
24** While UsefulNotes/GeorgyMalenkov was pretty weak-willed in reality, he wasn't quite as incompetent as he's portrayed. He was a charming conversationalist and knew about Beria's attempts to make him into a PuppetKing, though he couldn't do much about them.
25** Anastas Mikoyan is portrayed as a cowardly YesMan like the rest of the Presidium. By contrast, the real Mikoyan was not only respected by both the American and Soviet political elites, he was something of an HonestAdvisor who was actually ballsy enough to ''argue with Stalin''.
26* ''Film/{{Dick}}'' depicts Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein as a couple of egotistical buffoons.
27* Claus von Stauffenberg, leader of the failed 1944 assassination attempt against UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler, is often portrayed as practically a saint; Creator/TomCruise played him this way in ''Film/{{Valkyrie}}''. But the German film ''Film/OperationValkyrie'' takes pains to point out that Stauffenberg was a Hitler supporter when Hitler first came to power in 1933. It also shows some of the unfortunate comments he made in letters to his wife from the front line in 1939 in UsefulNotes/{{Poland}}, like how Poland was a "riffraff" country filled with "Jewish and mixed races" and how Polish prisoners could be made to work German farms.
28* The 2010 ''Film/{{Robin Hood|2010}}'' movie was quite fond of this, the most obvious example being King UsefulNotes/RichardTheLionheart, who wobbles around the battlefield drunk and winds up being killed by a French cook taking a potshot. Prince (and then King) [[UsefulNotes/KingJohnOfEngland John]] meanders between this and the villainous version. The Sheriff definitely gets this, being rendered so laughably incompetent that even if he had been given a chance for villainy, he probably couldn't have managed it.
29* ''Film/SchindlersList'', surprisingly, does this with both Oskar Schindler and Amon Goeth--which you wouldn't think would be true, given how heavily the film emphasizes both the enormity of Schindler's attempts to save others and the utter cruelty of Goeth. In real life, Schindler started saving Jews well before he does in the film, as early as 1939--due to his connections with the Nazi Party, he was one of the first to know what was going on, and started acting fairly soon. In the film, he is depicted as hemming and hawing on the issue somewhat until he sees a massacre for himself, likely to give him more of an arc and emphasize his nature as a MrViceGuy. Goeth, meanwhile, is estimated to have killed at least 500 people, and that's just the ones he killed personally--indeed, much of his infamy is that the Nazis ultimately fired him for cruelty to prisoners. [[EvenEvilHasStandards That is not a joke]]. According to Spielberg, he felt that had he put more of the real Goeth's feats in the film, it would have been too over the top for audiences to believe it.
30* ''Film/TimeBandits'' does this to every historical figure the heroes meet. UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte is [[TheNapoleon obsessed with his height]] and barely pays attention to his conquests. Myth/RobinHood is a clueless idealist who cannot control his thuggish followers. Even King Agamemnon, a nice guy and a brave warrior, would have died if Kevin hadn't saved him, and he allows Kevin to get kidnapped right under his nose.
31* ''Film/{{Wonder Woman|2017}}'' does this to Field Marshal Douglas Haig. In wartime and shortly thereafter Haig was considered as very capable strategist who was practically inventing modern warfare on the fly. Only after his death he became criticized as ineffective "Butcher of the Somme". In the film he is further reduced to the status of Ares' puppet.
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34[[folder:Literature]]
35* The ''Literature/MastersOfRome'' series of novels does this to Brutus, who is portrayed as a basically decent person (at least compared to most of the other characters), but with the flaws of greed, timidity, pedantry and cowardice.
36* ''Literature/WarAndPeace'' loves to do this to every major historical figure in the Napoleonic Wars, particularly Napoleon himself, emphasizing how they don't really know what's going on and their commands are actually so out of touch with the actual reality of war that they don't matter much at all, as well as showing them to have more pathetic human motivations. This is to criticize the "Great Man" view of history that was popular at the time.
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40[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
41* ''Series/{{Blackadder}}'' thrives on this trope.
42** 'Blackadder II'' portrays Queen UsefulNotes/ElizabethI as a [[TheCaligula total nutjob]].
43** [[RegencyEngland Prince George IV]] (a.k.a. [[UpperClassTwit Prince Minibrain]]) of 'Blackadder the Third'' would also count. Prince George may have been a glutton and profligate spender, but there's no indication he was an idiot. [[SubvertedTrope Then again]], [[spoiler:considering [[PrinceAndPauper who he was replaced by in the end]]]]... In a case of InvertedTrope however, he was described as very fat in real-life (and [[InformedFlaw several times in the series]]) but Creator/HughLaurie can hardly be described in this way.
44** ''Blackadder Goes Forth'' depicts Field Marshal Haig as a callous butcher in an office of tactical maps set up with soldier figures, and he casually sweeps them off and chucks them over his shoulder when Blackadder calls about that battle Haig is "planning." Haig does not respond well to being asked to return the favor[[note]]which refers back to Blackadder's earlier comments about how the British Army's old policy was to ''never'' fight anyone who actually had guns, and Blackadder saved Haig from having his genitals damaged by a native woman with a "sharpened mango"[[/note]] and tells him to feign insanity (which has already failed), then hangs up.
45* ''Series/TheCrown2016'': The series ignored Princess Margaret's life-long passion for Childrens Care and her patronage for the arts and instead focused on her role as the Screw Up Partying Sister to UsefulNotes/ElizabethII (ironic, given that early in the series Margaret pointed out the media's tendency to play "good sister, wicked sister" regardless of the truth).
46* ''Series/IClaudius'': History remembers Augustus Caesar as a brilliant statesman, one of the most powerful and successful monarchs in human history, who laid the foundation for [[UsefulNotes/RomanEmpire an]] [[UsefulNotes/ByzantineEmpire Empire]] that would last 1,500 years. In the series, however, he's depicted as an emotional and gullible ManChild who is also an incompetent statesman. His wife Livia easily manipulates him and states that she's been the one [[ManBehindTheMan holding Rome together]] in the face of Augustus's foolish policies.
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49[[folder:Theatre]]
50* ''Theatre/SeventeenSeventySix'':
51** Richard Henry Lee did not behave so [[{{pun}} ridiculous-Lee]] in real life. Adams actually wrote of Lee as one of the people he liked the best in the Second Continental Congress and Lee had already done a great deal of work drumming up support for independence. His behavior in the show is by way of explaining why Lee, not Adams, introduces the measure, exposition for the political dynamics in play at the time, they needed a bombastic ShowStopper to make it through the lack of music for the next 30 minutes, and [[RuleOfFunny it was funny]].
52** There was precious little scholarship on James Wilson at the time ''1776'' was written and with no information to go on, Stone and Edwards had to invent a reason for his last-minute switch to the Independence faction. The play's weak-willed Wilson is put on the spot and realizes that he can either vote "yes" in obscurity or vote "no" and be remembered forever for killing independence. [[DatedHistory Later research revealed]] that Wilson was a well-respected Congressman and a strong ''proponent'' of independence. He'd only withheld his "yes" that long because he insisted on polling his district to make sure he wasn't overriding their wishes.
53** This is an in-universe discussion between Adams and Franklin. Adams morosely speculates that he won't end up in the history books at all--instead, Franklin and Washington will have done it all. (And this was true for many years. ''1776'' did a lot to raise Adams from obscurity.)
54--->'''Adams:''' Franklin smote the ground and out sprang George Washington, fully-grown and on his horse. Franklin then ''electrified'' him with his miraculous lightning rod and the three of them--Franklin, Washington, and the horse--conducted the entire revolution by themselves.\
55[{{Beat}}]\
56'''Franklin:''' I like it.
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59[[folder:Video Games]]
60* ''VisualNovel/TheGreatAceAttorney'': Soseki Natsume was, and still is, considered a strong contender for the greatest author in the history of Japanese literature. While the Soseki of GAA is a talented literary scholar and writer (and has already achieved national acclaim by the time of GAA 2-1), he's also an insanely paranoid NervousWreck who is mainly used as comic relief due to his overblown mannerisms and LargeHam tendencies.
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63[[folder:Web Animation]]
64* ''WebAnimation/UnbiasedHistory'': PlayedForLaughs, as the openly pro-Roman narrator Dovahatty frequently demeans accomplished people to promote his agenda. For example, he paints the Ancient Greeks as being dumb brutes who adopted the trappings of civilization from the Romans' Trojan ancestors, while in reality, the Greeks were widely respected by other cultures for their achievements and innovations, even by the Romans themselves.
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67[[folder:Web Original]]
68* ''WebVideo/HitlerRants'' generally turns UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler into a ButtMonkey who holds negligible influence outside the ''Führerbunker'' and is a constant victim of antics generally (but not always) committed by [[ThePrankster Fegelein]]. It also makes a mockery of the vast majority of his inner circle as well.
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71[[folder:Western Animation]]
72* ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken'' does this to UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler.
73* ''WesternAnimation/TimeSquad'' played with this. The usual mission of the eponymous squad was to correct an individual who had, by the cause of whatever temporal anomaly, been on the receiving end of a Historical Downgrade, and it was their job to fix them and save history.
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