By Cas Morris Victoria Victoria was the only child of the Duke of Kent William IVs brother William had no heirs so upon his death the throne passed to his niece She was only 18 Received the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lord Chamberlain at 500 AM in her nightgown ID: 678684
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Slide1
Queen Victoria and the British Empire
By
Cas
MorrisSlide2
Victoria
Victoria was the only child of the Duke of Kent, William IV’s brother
William had no heirs so upon his death the throne passed to his niece.
She was only 18
Received the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lord Chamberlain at 5:00 AM in her nightgownSlide3
The Queen’s Politics
Victoria was a devoted
whig
Had an infatuation for her Prime Minister Lord Melbourne who helped her adjust to her new position and gave her guidance
Caused a scandal when Lord Melbourne resigned and the conservative’s came to power as she refused to trade her
whig
ladies-in-waiting for conservative ones as was the tradition.
Referred to as the “Bedchamber Crisis”Slide4
Marriage to Prince Albert
Victoria married Prince Albert in 1840
They were incredibly taken with each other and in her journal she describes their wedding night saying they slept little and describing a scene in which Albert put on her stockings for her and she watched him shave
They had nine children together the first within a few months of marryingSlide5
Political Climate During Victoria’s Reign
Unemployment was high and poverty common
The hungry 40’s
There was anger over the Corn Laws, eventually repealed in 1846
The Whigs were losing sway and the
Torries
were gaining momentum.
Despite this and some early shakiness, such as the Bedchamber Crisis, Victoria’s monarchy was very popularSlide6
The Great Exhibition
Held in 1851
Organized by Prince Albert
A building was constructed in Hyde Park to house the exhibition called the “The Crystal Palace”
Put on to show off the variety and superiority of British manufactured goods
Albert hoped it would be the first of many such gatheringsSlide7
Excerpts from Victoria’s Journal on the Exhibition
This day is one of the greatest and most glorious days of our lives, with which, to my pride and joy the name of my dearly beloved Albert is forever associated! It is a day which makes my heart swell with
thankfulness.
The Green Park and Hyde Park were one mass of densely crowded human beings, in the highest good
humour
and most enthusiastic. I never saw Hyde Park look as it did, being filled with crowds as far as the eye could reach. A little rain fell, just as we started; but before we neared the
Crystal
Palace, the sun shone and gleamed upon the gigantic edifice, upon which the flags of every nation were
flying
(“Historical speeches and writings, Victoria”
the British Monarchy Website,
accessed March 21, 2015, Royal.gov.uk/pdf/Victoria.pdfSlide8
Women’s rights
The women’s movement began gaining traction in Victoria’s reign
During this time was published, “The Subjection of Women”. Written by John Stuart Mill and his wife Harriet Taylor Mill the book argued for equality of the sexes.
The suffragette movement also began taking off in this period.
Victoria herself was not fond of the movement claiming that it was an affront to the natural order.Slide9
Acquisition of India
After rebellion in India in 1857 the East India Company was disbanded.
As a result the subcontinent of India was formally added to the British Empire and Victoria became Empress of India
Victoria hoped that by passing governance of the region from the Eat India Company to the actual state of Britain peace could be achieved.Slide10
Death of Albert
In December of 1861 Albert died most probably of Typhoid
Victoria was stricken with grief.
She was in mourning for the remainder of her life and even had a special small crown fashioned that she could wear with her widow’s veil.
She fell into seclusion and rarely left Windsor Castle earning her the title the “Widow of Windsor”.
While she never shirked her duties her lack of public appearances caused her approval with the people to fall.Slide11
Excerpt from a Letter from Victoria to Her Uncle King Leopold on Albert’s Death
… to be cut off in the prime of life - to see our pure happy, quiet domestic life, which alone enabled me to bear my much disliked position, cut off at forty-two - when I had hoped with such instinctive certainty that God never would part us, and would let us grow old together ... - is too awful, too cruel
! (“Historical speeches and writings, Victoria”
the British Monarchy Website,
accessed March 21, 2015, Royal.gov.uk/pdf/Victoria.pdf).Slide12
Death
Victoria died on January 22 1901
She was laid to rest beside her husband, he tomb decorated with her likeness as she had looked at the time of his death so that it appeared as though no time at all had passed.Slide13
Legacy
By the end of her reign she had become more a figurehead than a truly ruling monarch. The trend of constitutional monarchy that had begun with the
Honoverians
continued throughout her reign.
Victoria had become more of a moral authority than a political setting an example for the country to follow
.
Because she had children in the royal families of so much of Europe she became known as the Grandmother of Europe. All together she and Albert had 34 grandchildren survive to adulthood.
She was succeeded by her son Edward VII