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Queen Victoria
I INTRODUCTION
Victoria (queen) (1819-1901), queen of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland (1837-1901) and empress of India (1876-1901). Her
reign was the longest of any monarch in British history and came to be
known as the Victorian era.
Queen Victoria was the official head of state not only of the United
Kingdom but also of the growing worldwide British Empire, which included
Canada, Australia, India, New Zealand, and large parts of Africa. As the
personal embodiment of her kingdom, Victoria was eager to ensure that
her country was held in high esteem throughout the world as an
economically and militarily powerful state and as a model of
civilization. Victoria brought to the British monarchy such 19th-century
ideals as a devoted family life, earnestness, public and private
respectability, and obedience to the law. During the later years of her
reign, the monarchy attained a high degree of popularity among most of
its subjects.
II CHILDHOOD
Queen Victoria was born Alexandrina Victoria on May 24, 1819, in
Kensington Palace, London. Her parents were Victoria Mary Louisa,
daughter of the duke of the German principality of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld,
and Edward Augustus, duke of Kent and Strathern, the fourth son of King
George III of Great Britain. When Victoria was eight months old, her
father died. Victoria’s mother raised her in Kensington Palace with
the help of German governesses, private English tutors, and Victoria’s
uncle, Prince Leopold (who in 1831 became King Leopold I of Belgium).
Victoria learned to speak and write French and German as readily as
English. She also studied history, geography, and the Bible. She was
taught how to play the piano and learned how to paint, a hobby that she
enjoyed into her 60s. Because Victoria’s uncle, King William IV, had
no legitimate children, Victoria became heir apparent to the British
crown upon his accession in 1830. On June 20, 1837, with the death of
William IV, she became queen at the age of 18.
III EARLY REIGN
Immediately after becoming queen, Victoria began regular meetings with
William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, the British prime minister at the
time. The two grew very close, and Melbourne taught Victoria how the
British government worked on a day-to-day basis.
Britain in the 19th century was a constitutional monarchy, and the king
or queen ruled through ministers who were members of, and required the
support of, the British Parliament. This meant that the monarch had some
influence in government, but not a great deal of real power. In the
course of her reign, Queen Victoria played a role in appointing some
cabinet ministers (and even a prime minister), as well as particular
ambassadors and bishops of the Church of England, and she consulted
regularly with her prime ministers by letter and in person. In private,
Victoria was never afraid to speak her mind. Much of her time, however,
was devoted to ceremonial activities such as the official opening and
closing of each year’s session of Parliament.
Victoria was very fond of Melbourne, and because he was the leader of
the Whig Party (which later became the Liberal Party), Victoria began
publicly to support the Whigs rather than the opposition party, the
Tories (later the Conservative Party). The Whigs were sympathetic to
freedom of speech and of the press and favored greater religious liberty
for those people who did not belong to the official Church of England.
The Tories were more concerned with maintaining the country’s
established institutions and with making no further legal concessions to
religious minorities.
The young queen hoped that the Whigs would continue to keep a majority
of seats in the House of Commons (the lower house of the British
Parliament) so that Melbourne could remain prime minister. When it
appeared in 1839 that he might have to give up the post, the queen
successfully used her influence to keep him. In the so-called Bedchamber
Crisis, she refused to allow Tory leader Sir Robert Peel to change the
ladies-in-waiting of her court, all of whom were Whig sympathizers. Peel
then felt unable to form a government, and Melbourne continued as prime
minister for two more years. A general election in 1841 resulted in a
majority of Tory party members in the House of Commons, however, and
Victoria was compelled to accept Peel as prime minister.
IV MARRIED LIFE
In 1839 Victoria fell in love with her first cousin, Prince Albert, of
the small German principality of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. They were married in
February 1840, and Albert soon developed a keen interest in the
government of his new country. Albert was an unusually studious and
serious young man, and he served as his wife’s private secretary. He
was an active patron of the arts and sciences, and he was the prime
organizer of the Great Exhibition of 1851, the first true world s fair,
which was held in the Crystal Palace in London’s Hyde Park. Albert
also favored the expansion of education, and he served as chancellor of
the University of Cambridge. He became a great champion of the
strengthening and modernizing of Britain s armed forces. Though Albert
was respected by most of his new countrymen, he was not loved; many
resented him because he was a foreigner, and his heavy German accent did
not help.
The Royal Family
For Victoria, however, Albert represented perfection, and the two were
very happy together. The royal couple offered an example of family life
that contrasted sharply with the images of previous British monarchs.
Between 1840 and 1857, Victoria and Albert had nine children. They took
an intense personal interest in the upbringing of their children, and
they did not leave them solely in the care of nannies and governesses.
They increasingly enjoyed a private family life, particularly at Osborne
House on the Isle of Wight and Balmoral Castle in Scotland, both of them
rebuilt on the basis of Albert’s designs.
B Early Victorian Politics
The royal couple took a sympathetic interest in the efforts of Sir
Robert Peel in 1846 to abolish the Corn Laws (acts of Parliament that
protected landlords and farmers against foreign competition) and to lead
Britain toward international free trade, but in the process he divided
his Conservative Party. During the 1850s, with the two-party tradition
in temporary disarray, the influence of the monarchy on the formation of
ministries reached a 19th-century highpoint. In 1851 royal initiative
led to the dismissal of the popular Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount
Palmerston, from his post as foreign secretary. He had failed too often
to consult the queen before sending dispatches to British diplomats
abroad.
Although Victoria and Albert were initially unhappy with the manner in
which their country drifted into the Crimean War (1853-1856) against
Russia, they became enthusiastic supporters of the conflict once
fighting had begun, and in 1855 Victoria appointed Palmerston as wartime
prime minister. The queen personally instituted the Victoria Cross as
the highest British award for wartime valor.
V WIDOWHOOD
Queen Victoria never truly recovered from Albert’s death in December
1861 at the age of 42. For almost a decade she remained in strict
mourning. She rarely set foot in London, and she avoided most public
occasions, including the state opening of Parliament. She made an
exception, however, for the unveiling of statues dedicated to Prince
Albert and, after a few years, for attendance at army reviews.
Behind the scenes, she continued to correspond with and talk to her
ministers, and she took comfort in the company of her favorite servant,
a Scottish Highlander named John Brown. By the late 1860s, the queen’s
absence from the public stage caused her popularity to decline, and
there was talk of replacing the monarchy with a republic. In the course
of the later 1870s and the 1880s, she gradually returned to the public
arena, and her popularity rose once more.
Late Victorian Politics
Although in her youth she had been known as the “Queen of the
Whigs,†in the course of the later 1860s and 1870s she came to prefer
Benjamin Disraeli, the leader of the Conservative Party, to William
Ewart Gladstone, the leader of the Liberal Party. Disraeli impressed
Victoria as being more concerned with Britain s international prestige
and with the strengthening of its empire. She strongly supported
Disraeli s government from 1874 to 1880. In 1876, when Parliament made
her empress of India, she showed her gratitude to Disraeli by opening
Parliament in person and by creating him earl of Beaconsfield.
When Disraeli s government was defeated in the general election of 1880,
Victoria made little secret of her disappointment in being compelled to
name Gladstone prime minister for a second time. Gladstone impressed her
as too much a popular demagogue and too ready to tamper with the
kingdom s institutions. When in 1866 he proposed home rule (domestic
self-government) for Ireland, the queen felt that he was undermining the
British Empire. Despite Victoria’s dislike, Gladstone continued to
treat the queen with courteous respect.
During the last 15 years of her reign, the Conservatives dominated
Britain’s government most of the time under prime minister Robert
Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury. Victoria was
sympathetic to Salisbury’s views on foreign affairs and the empire.
She strongly supported her government’s involvement in the Boer War
(1899-1902) in South Africa, even though the anxieties of the struggle
and the criticism that Britain received from other European powers took
their toll on the queen.
The Grandmother of Europe
During the years after Albert’s death, the queen remained concerned
with her ever-growing family. All nine of her children married, and
eight of them had children of their own. Some of Victoria’s children
and grandchildren eventually married the heirs to thrones of Spain,
Russia, Sweden, Norway, and Romania. Because of her many descendents,
Victoria became known as the “Grandmother of Europe.â€Â
The most important of these marriages occurred when Victoria’s eldest
child, also named Victoria, was married at age 17 to Crown Prince
Frederick, the heir to the kingdom of Prussia (and, as of 1871, the
German Empire). Victoria and Albert had hoped that the marriage would
strengthen the bonds of Anglo-German understanding and would help
transform Prussia into a constitutional monarchy like that of Britain.
In the long run their hopes were disappointed as Frederick’s son (and
the queen’s oldest grandchild) went on, as Emperor William II of
Germany, to lead the anti-British coalition during World War I
(1914-1918).
By the 1880s Victoria had again become the popular symbol of dutiful
public service. She appeared in public more often. Excerpts from her
private journals that she published in 1868 and 1884 helped to humanize
her in the eyes of her subjects. Her personal identification with
late-19th-century empire building and the sheer length of her reign also
enhanced her popularity. In 1887 her Golden Jubilee, the 50th
anniversary of her accession to the throne, was celebrated with great
enthusiasm. The Diamond Jubilee of 1897 brought representatives of all
the different parts of the British Empire to London and led to the first
meeting of the prime ministers of Britain’s colonies; it was then that
Victoria’s popularity reached its peak. Four years later, after a
reign of 63 years, she died on January 22, 1901, in Osborne House.
VI CONCLUSIONS
The length of Queen Victoria’s reign gave an impression of continuity
to what was actually a period of dynamic change as Britain grew to
become a powerful industrialized trading nation. The queen sympathized
with some of these changesâ€â€such as the camera, the railroad, and the
use of anesthetics in childbirth. She felt doubtful about others,
however, such as giving the vote to many more people, establishing
tax-supported schools, and allowing women into professions such as
medicine. During her reign, the popularity of the British monarchy
underwent both ups and downs but ultimately increased. Victoria was
important because she brought morality, good manners, and a devotion to
hard work to her role as constitutional monarch. She took pride in her
role as formal head of the world’s largest multiracial and
multireligious empire, and her honesty, patriotism, and devotion to
family life made the queen an appropriate symbol of the Victorian era.
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