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INTRODUCTION |
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HER
STORY |
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QUOTES |
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TRIVIA |
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NICKNAME |
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GALLERY |
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CURIOS |
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VOX
POPULI |
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SHOP |
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Victoria, born May 24, 1819, was
the daughter of Edward, Duke of Kent
and Strathearn and Victoria
of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. Edward died when Victoria was but eight months old,
upon which her mother enacted a strict regimen that, shunned the courts of
Victoria's uncles, George IV and William IV. She married Prince Albert of
Saxe-Coburg-Gotha in 1840; the union produced four sons and five
daughters. She died at eighty-one years of age on January 22, 1901, after
a reign of sixty-three years.
She ascended the throne upon
the death of William IV. Barely eighteen, she refused any further
influence from her domineering mother and ruled in her own stead. Popular
respect for the Crown was at low point at her coronation, but the modest
and straightforward young Queen won the hearts of her subjects. She wished
to be informed of political matters, although she had no direct input in
policy decisions. The Reform Act of 1832 had set the standard of
legislative authority residing in the House of Lords, with executive
authority resting within a cabinet formed of members of the House of
Commons; the monarch was essentially removed from the loop. She respected
and worked well with Lord Melbourne, Prime Minister in the early years of
her reign, and England grew both socially and economically.
Victoria married Prince Albert
in 1840, who replaced Melbourne as the dominant male influence in
Victoria's life. She was thoroughly devoted to him and completely
submitted to his will. The public, however, was not enamored with the
German prince; he was excluded from holding any official political
position, was never granted a title of peerage and was named Prince
Consort only after 17 years of marriage. Victoria did nothing without her
husband's approval. His interests in art, science and industry spurred him
to organize the Crystal Palace Exhibition in 1851, a highly profitable
industrial convention. He used the proceeds, some £186,000, to purchase
lands in Kensington for the establishment of several cultural and
industrial museums. His death from typhoid in 1861 deeply affected
Victoria's psyche - she went into seclusion for more than 25 years, not
emerging until the Golden Jubilee of 1867, the celebration of her fiftieth
year on the throne. An entire generation was raised without ever having
seen the face of their Queen.
The reform of government
allowed England to avoid the politically tumultuous conditions sweeping
across Europe in the mid-nineteenth century. The continent experienced the
growing pains of conservatism, liberalism and socialism, and the
nationalistic struggle for political unification. England focused on
developing industry and trade and expanding its imperial reach; during the
reign of Victoria, the empire doubled in size, encompassing Canada,
Australia, India and various locales in Africa and the South Pacific. Her
reign was almost free of war, with an Irish uprising (1848), the Boer Wars
in South Africa (1881, 1899-1902) and an Indian rebellion (1857) being the
only exceptions. Victoria was named Empress of India in 1878. England
avoided continental conflict from 1815 through 1914, the lone exception
being the Crimean War (1853-56). The success in avoiding European
entanglements was, in large part, due to the marriage of Victoria's
children: either directly or by marriage, she was related to the royal
houses of Germany, Russia, Greece, Rumania, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and
Belgium. Nicholas II of Russia was married to Victoria's granddaughter
Alexandra, earning him the nickname "dear Nicky", and the
dreaded Emperor of Germany, Kaiser Wilhelm II, was her grandson
"Willy". During her seclusion, she ruled her family with the
iron hand that was denied her by the English constitutional arrangement.
The old political parties of
England, the Whigs and the Tories transformed during the reign of
Victoria. John Peel's support of the Corn Law Repeal splintered the Tories
into two camps. Peel's supporters joined with Whigs to create the Liberal
Party and the anti-Peel Tories became the Conservative Party. Unlike most
of Europe, English politicians agreed on the larger issues of governmental
structure and political ideology, but differed on the smaller issues of
policy practicality and implementation. Liberals represented traders and
manufacturers, with Conservatives representing the landed gentry.
Victoria's role after this political realignment was one of mediation
between departing and arriving Prime Ministers (the Prime Minister was
chosen by the party in control of the House of Commons). She was
particularly fond of Conservative Benjamin
Disraeli, who, by linking
Victoria to the expansion of the empire, garnered respect for the monarchy
that had been lacking since Victoria's seclusion. She despised the other
prominent Prime Minister of the day, the Liberal William
Gladstone, whose
party dominated Parliament from 1846-1874. Even in the throes of grief
during her seclusion, Victoria gave close attention to daily business and
administration, at a time when England was evolving politically and
socially. Legislation passed in the era included the Mines Act (1842), The
Education Act (1870), The Public Health and Artisan's Dwelling Acts
(1875), Trade Union Acts (1871 and 1876) and Reform Acts in 1867 and 1884
which broadened suffrage.
The national pride connected
with the name of Victoria - the term Victorian
England, for example,
stemmed from the Queen's ethics and personal tastes, which generally
reflected those of the middle class. The Golden Jubilee brought her out of
her shell, and she again embraced public life. She toured English
possessions and even visited France (the first English monarch to do so
since the coronation of Henry VI in 1431). When she died of old age, an
entire era died with her.
Victoria's long reign witnessed
an evolution in English politics and the expansion of the British Empire,
as well as political and social reforms on the continent. France had known
two dynasties and embraced Republicanism, Spain had seen three monarchs
and both Italy and Germany had united their separate principalities into
national coalitions. Even in her dotage, she maintained a youthful energy
and optimism that infected the English population as a whole.
Lytton Strachey chronicled her
last days with the sentimentality that had developed by the end of her
reign, in the biography, Queen Victoria: " By the end of the year the
last remains of her ebbing strength had almost deserted her; and through
the early days of the opening century it was clear that her dwindling
forces were kept together only by an effort of will. On January 14, she
had at Osbourne an hour's interview with Lord Roberts, who had returned
victorious from South Africa a few days before. She inquired with acute
anxiety into all the details of the war; she appeared to sustain the
exertion successfully; but, when the audience was over, there was a
collapse. On the following day her medical attendants recognised that her
state was hopeless; and yet, for two days more, the indomitable spirit
fought on; for two days more she discharged the duties of a Queen of
England. But after that there was an end of working; and then, and not
till then, did the last optimism of those about her break down. The brain
was failing and life was gently slipping away. Her family gathered round
her; for a little more she lingered, speechless and apparently insensible;
and, on January 22, 1901, she died." Victoria's was the longest reign
in English history.
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