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VICTORIA (r. 1837-1901)ÂÂ
Victoria was born at Kensington Palace, London, on 24 May 1819. She was
the only daughter of Edward, Duke of Kent, fourth son of George III. Her
father died shortly after her birth and she became heir to the throne
because the three uncles who were ahead of her in succession - George
IV, Frederick Duke of York, and William IV - had no legitimate children
who survived. Warmhearted and lively, Victoria had a gift for drawing
and painting; educated by a governess at home, she was a natural diarist
and kept a regular journal throughout her life. On William IV s death in
1837, she became Queen at the age of 18.
Queen Victoria is associated with Britain s great age of industrial
expansion, economic progress and - especially - empire. At her death, it
was said, Britain had a worldwide empire on which the sun never set.
In the early part of her reign, she was influenced by two men: her first
Prime Minister, Lord Melbourne, and her husband, Prince Albert, whom she
married in 1840. Both men taught her much about how to be a ruler in a
constitutional monarchy where the monarch had very few powers but
could use much influence. Albert took an active interest in the arts,
science, trade and industry; the project for which he is best remembered
was the Great Exhibition of 1851, the profits from which helped to
establish the South Kensington museums complex in London.
Her marriage to Prince Albert brought nine children between 1840 and
1857. Most of her children married into other royal families of Europe:
Edward VII (born 1841, married Alexandra, daughter of Christian IX of
Denmark); Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh and of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (born
1844, married Marie of Russia); Arthur, Duke of Connaught (born 1850,
married Louise Margaret of Prussia); Leopold, Duke of Albany (born 1853,
married Helen of Waldeck-Pyrmont); Victoria, Princess Royal (born 1840,
married Friedrich III, German Emperor); Alice (born 1843, married Ludwig
IV, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine); Helena (born 1846, married
Christian of Schleswig-Holstein); Louise (born 1848, married John
Campbell, 9th Duke of Argyll); Beatrice (born 1857, married Henry of
Battenberg). Victoria bought Osborne House (later presented to the
nation by Edward VII) on the Isle of Wight as a family home in 1845, and
Albert bought Balmoral in 1852.
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Victoria was deeply attached to her husband and she sank into depression
after he died, aged 42, in 1861. She had lost a devoted husband and her
principal trusted adviser in affairs of state. For the rest of her reign
she wore black. Until the late 1860s she rarely appeared in public;
although she never neglected her official Correspondence, and continued
to give audiences to her ministers and official visitors, she was
reluctant to resume a full public life. She was persuaded to open
Parliament in person in 1866 and 1867, but she was widely criticised for
living in seclusion and quite a strong republican movement developed.
(Seven attempts were made on Victoria s life, between 1840 and 1882 -
her courageous attitude towards these attacks greatly strengthened her
popularity.) With time, the private urgings of her family and the
flattering attention of Benjamin Disraeli, Prime Minister in 1868 and
from 1874 to 1880, the Queen gradually resumed her public duties.
In foreign policy, the Queen s influence during the middle years of her
reign was generally used to support peace and reconciliation. In 1864,
Victoria pressed her ministers not to intervene in the
Prussia-Austria-Denmark war, and her letter to the German Emperor (whose
son had married her daughter) in 1875 helped to avert a second
Franco-German war. On the Eastern Question in the 1870s - the issue of
Britain s policy towards the declining Turkish Empire in Europe -
Victoria (unlike Gladstone) believed that Britain, while pressing for
necessary reforms, ought to uphold Turkish hegemony as a bulwark of
stability against Russia, and maintain bi-partisanship at a time when
Britain could be involved in war.
Victoria s popularity grew with the increasing imperial sentiment from
the 1870s onwards. After the Indian Mutiny of 1857, the government of
India was transferred from the East India Company to the Crown with the
position of Governor General upgraded to Viceroy, and in 1877 Victoria
became Empress of India under the Royal Titles Act passed by Disraeli s
government.
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During Victoria s long reign, direct political power moved away from the
sovereign. A series of Acts broadened the social and economic base of
the electorate. These acts included the Second Reform Act of 1867; the
introduction of the secret ballot in 1872, which made it impossible to
pressurise voters by bribery or intimidation; and the Representation of
the Peoples Act of 1884 - all householders and lodgers in accommodation
worth at least £10 a year, and occupiers of land worth £10 a year,
were entitled to vote.
Despite this decline in the Sovereign s power, Victoria showed that a
monarch who had a high level of prestige and who was prepared to master
the details of political life could exert an important influence. This
was demonstrated by her mediation between the Commons and the Lords,
during the acrimonious passing of the Irish Church Disestablishment Act
of 1869 and the 1884 Reform Act. It was during Victoria s reign that the
modern idea of the constitutional monarch, whose role was to remain
above political parties, began to evolve. But Victoria herself was not
always non-partisan and she took the opportunity to give her opinions -
sometimes very forcefully - in private.
After the Second Reform Act of 1867, and the growth of the two-party
(Liberal and Conservative) system, the Queen s room for manoeuvre
decreased. Her freedom to choose which individual should occupy the
premiership was increasingly restricted. In 1880, she tried,
unsuccessfully, to stop William Gladstone - whom she disliked as much as
she admired Disraeli and whose policies she distrusted - from becoming
Prime Minister. She much preferred the Marquess of Hartington, another
statesman from the Liberal party which had just won the general
election. She did not get her way. She was a very strong supporter of
Empire, which brought her closer both to Disraeli and to the Marquess of
Salisbury, her last Prime Minister. Although conservative in some
respects - like many at the time she opposed giving women the vote - on
social issues, she tended to favour measures to improve the lot of the
poor, such as the Royal Commission on housing. She also supported many
charities involved in education, hospitals and other areas.
Victoria and her family travelled and were seen on an unprecedented
scale, thanks to transport improvements and other technical changes such
as the spread of newspapers and the invention of photography. Victoria
was the first reigning monarch to use trains - she made her first train
journey in 1842.
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In her later years, she almost became the symbol of the British Empire.
Both the Golden (1887) and the Diamond (1897) Jubilees, held to
celebrate the 50th and 60th anniversaries of the queen s accession, were
marked with great displays and public ceremonies. On both occasions,
Colonial Conferences attended by the Prime Ministers of the
self-governing colonies were held.
Despite her advanced age, Victoria continued her duties to the end -
including an official visit to Dublin in 1900. The Boer War in South
Africa overshadowed the end of her reign. As in the Crimean War nearly
half a century earlier, Victoria reviewed her troops and visited
hospitals; she remained undaunted by British reverses during the
campaign: We are not interested in the possibilities of defeat; they do
not exist.
Victoria died at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight, on 22 January 1901
after a reign which lasted almost 64 years, the longest in British
history. She was buried at Windsor beside Prince Albert, in the Frogmore
Royal Mausoleum, which she had built for their final resting place.
Above the Mausoleum door are inscribed Victoria s words: farewell best
beloved, here at last I shall rest with thee, with thee in Christ I
shall rise again .
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