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What picture comes to mind when you think of Queen Victoria? For many it will be a grieving woman in her morning gown. Or perhaps a monarch coolly stating we are not amused. From her marriage to Prince Albert to founding many of the royal traditions we know today. Tracy Borman speaks to Lauren Good about Victoria's life and explains why we should rethink our opinion of her.
Hi Tracy, thank you so much for appearing on History Extra's Life of the Week series. We're talking about Queen Victoria today. Who was she in a nutshell? Well Lauren, she was quite a remarkable woman. She's one of our most famous monarchs, certainly one of our most famous queens. We haven't actually had many queens regnant. And until Elizabeth II she was the longest reigning monarch in British history. So she was quite a formidable figure.
And this is an interesting theme I think. She wasn't necessarily born to be queen. She was just the daughter of George III's fourth son Edward Duke of Kent. So George III had 15 children. He had no trouble filling the royal nursery. But unfortunately his many sons didn't particularly like getting married. And so this prompted a bit of succession crisis ultimately. And there was what was known as the baby race after the death of George III's immediate heir, George IV's daughter Charlotte. So suddenly there was a need for an heir. And quickest off the mark was his fourth son Edward Duke of Kent who married a German princess, Victoria. And they pretty soon had a baby.
On the 24th of May 1819, the future Queen Victoria was born at Kensington Palace. Well, we call her Queen Victoria. That wasn't actually her name. It was her second name. But she was christened Alexandrina Victoria. And for much of her childhood was known as Drina. That was her sort of pet name. And then eventually she took the name Victoria like her mother.
And becoming queen at such a young age Victoria was 18. Wasn't she? Must have had a huge effect despite being the royal heir. What was her accession to the throne actually like? Yes, well, her uncle William IV, who was very close to Victoria, she had dored him actually said on one public occasion that he hoped he would live until his niece was 18. And he did just, you know, by about a month. In fact, just under that. And he died on the 20th of June, 1837. And Victoria was awoken early that morning with the news by the Archbishop of Canterbury. And she was at Kensington Palace. And it's fascinating that her first decision as queen was to spend an hour on her own, because that's something she hadn't been allowed to do during this increasingly restrictive childhood. She wanted to be completely alone. And then she held her first council meeting at Kensington Palace. And that was attended by, of course, all the her ministers and some quite formidable Victorian figures, such as the Duke of Wellington, hero of Waterloo.
Now, the Duke of Wellington had had a very low opinion of her predecessors, in particular, George IV. But he was enormously impressed with this 18-year-old who was still very naive in what it meant to be queen. And he described her as having an ease and self-possession. He said she not merely filled her chair. She filled the room. And he thought she acted as if she'd been performing the part for years. So she might have lacked experience, but one thing Victoria did not lack right from the beginning was presence.
And I often find it interesting to examine the upbringings of these people from history, especially monarchs, because they can be quite unusual. What was Queen Victoria's upbringing? Like, definitely unusual. And if you believe Victoria's version of events, it was a miserable childhood. She was always talking about this, writing about it, complaining how suffocating it was.
We perhaps have heard of the Kensington system, which was introduced by Victoria's mother and her mother's favourite, the despised Sir John Conroy, who Victoria called the Devilling Carnot. She hated Conroy. But he really replaced her father. Her father died quite early in Victoria's life, and her mother was very much dominated by Conroy. And they introduced the Kensington system when it became obvious that the young Victoria was going to be Queen one day. And it was very restrictive. And for example, she was never allowed to be alone. She had to hold somebody's hand when she was walking downstairs, even when she was well old enough to manage on her own. But that's any part of the story.
And actually, for most of Victoria's childhood, she was a pampered, rather spoiled little girl. She was surrounded by adored pets and musicians. And she went on carriage rides around Kensington Garden seaside holidays, always showered with presents.
And actually, she grew up, can I say, a spoiled brat and quite badly behaved actually, so much so that her governess, Baroness Lason, introduced a behavior book, which still exists in the royal collection. And she told Victoria to record her own behavior every day. So how do you think you did today? And it seemed to have been something that Victoria was quite honest about, because in one entry, Victoria admitted to having been very, very, very, very horribly naughty. Each word underlined four times and in capital letters. So goodness knows what she did on that day. So I think actually, it was a mixture of, as she became older, yes, it was a bit more suffocating. But her early years were very indulged, very spoiled. And her character really paid the price for that, I think.
Can we continue digging beneath this title of Queen for a moment? You've given us an insight there into what she was like as a child. But what was Queen Victoria's personality like as she grew older?
So I think lots of people quote something that really Victoria never said about, you know, I am not amused. And when you see photographs of Victoria, she looks like a sort of very sour-faced old woman, very miserable, distraught, of course, after the death of her husband Albert and really a mourner for the rest of her life. That was not the real Victoria. So the young Victoria was completely different to that. She came to the throne, something of a party girl. She was like a breath of fresh air. Now that she was at last free from that Kensington system, she was always going out and partying all night. She was at balls and assemblies. She was very sociable. She loved to laugh. And she was naturally very gregarious, very outgoing. She loved company, much more so actually than her future husband Albert, who at one of their early meetings, he attended one of her birthday parties and was absolutely wiped out by it and had to go to bed early. And Victoria was still up partying till the early hours. So I think your listeners, they should hopefully question that image of we are not amused, the dour old Victoria. She was very different to that.
And you've just mentioned Albert there. What was the marriage like between Queen Victoria and Prince Albert?
你刚刚提到了阿尔伯特。维多利亚女王和阿尔伯特亲王的婚姻是怎样的呢?
Well, it is often depicted as one of the great love stories in royal history. Certainly, there was a strong physical attraction between them. I think they genuinely loved each other. And Victoria found him intriguing and fascinating when they first met. And really they'd been destined for each other pretty much from birth. He was a German prince. They were born very close together. Just a few weeks apart, in fact, the same midwife delivered both Victoria and Albert, little known but fascinating fact. And yeah, she thought when he came to England when she was a teenager, and as I say, he attended a birthday party, she thought that he was very amiable and unaffected, as she said. But then he returned again and a few years later. And then when she saw him, it was sort of like love at second sight. And she was writing in this famous journal of hers, you know, all about how fascinating he was and how good looking and she danced with him all night. And so really, this was a love match for Victoria. So there is that side of it. But I think there's almost a more, we would probably consider it a more sinister side today, in that it was quite a coercive relationship. I don't think that's overstating it in that Albert did dominate Victoria and he did bend her to his will. If she was as he saw it, wayward or disobedient. Yeah, he would he would discipline her almost like a child. And then, and then when she did something that he approved of, he would call her dear, good child. So she was actually quite submissive to Albert and and his word was law. And yet this was the woman who began her reign, saying, I dreaded the thought of marrying. I was so accustomed to having my own way that I thought it tend to one, I shouldn't agree with anybody. And Albert changed all of that.
That's so interesting. And within this marriage, how many children did Victoria and Albert have?
这太有趣了。在这个婚姻中,维多利亚和阿尔伯特有几个孩子?
So they had nine children together. This was a woman who hated being pregnant, didn't really like children very much. But she had nine of them. She was pregnant almost straight after they got married. And she was almost continually pregnant.
For the first, well, certainly more than a decade of her marriage, she was either recovering from a birth or she was pregnant, which had a very profound impact on her queenship because she couldn't be as active a queen as she might have wanted to be. But I think by then she'd been really molded by Albert into this submissive wife.
In fact, when they married, she chose to obey. Albert. And she said that she wanted to be married as a woman, not as a queen. And this was shown in, I used to work at the National Archives and I loved delving through the census returns.
And there was a wonderful census return for Buckingham Palace for the year 1851, where Albert is listed as head of the household at Buckingham Palace. And Victoria, her profession is just listed as queen. But she's not the head of the household. And I think that really spoke volumes.
So she was really playing the part of a good Victorian housewife, having lots of children, you know, deferring to her husband, who she said she wished could be king. She would have liked him to be known as King Albert. But of course he was, he was merely Prince Albert.
And during their marriage and Victoria's reign, where were their residences? At the beginning of Victoria's reign, she moved into Buckingham Palace. She couldn't wait to get out of Kenzie to Ren Scottish, suddenly Tartan and the wearing of Tartan becomes very fashionable because Victoria loves it so much.
And they also had a seaside retreat, one of my own particular favourites, because I love the Isle of Wight and it's their Osborne House and it was, you know, to them just heaven and they would go there as often as they could. They built what became known as Swiss cottage in the grounds, which was basically a life-sized dole's house really for their children to play in.
The Albert was very keen on their children actually appreciating the value of hard work and of money and they had allotments that the children had to work in and then earn some money and and sell their vegetables. And I think actually it was a very good, very healthy upbringing for Victoria and Albert's children but they certainly liked their vacations and particularly at Osborne and Balmoral.
And all of this sadly came to an end when Albert died in 1861. What effect did his death have on Victoria? I think probably it was the most profoundly moving of all the many diary entries that Victoria wrote that very evening. She wrote all all was over. For Victoria that was almost the end of her own life. She was so deeply shocked.
Albert was only 42 years old. He came down with what Victoria just dismissed as a cold. Yeah, she didn't take it seriously. There is a theory that he'd actually been suffering from bowel cancer. There are some symptoms that have been analysed that suggest he hadn't been well for a while.
And it hit her like a tent on truck. She never got over Albert's death. She'd only earlier that year lost her mother and that had really had a huge impact on her too even though there was never an easy relationship. But Albert, that was it for Victoria. It was such a turning point in her life in her reign.
She became a morna for the rest of her life and her court was draped in black. She wrote letters on paper, edged so thickly with black that there was hardly room for her to write anything. On it morning almost became an art form for Victoria. And the most profound effect of all of this in terms of Victoria's monarchy is that she retired from her public royal duties.
She could no longer bear to be seen in public. So she retreated from the public lair. She still carried out her constitutional duties. You know, she did what was absolutely required. But people didn't see that and they started to resent that having been very sympathetic towards Victoria for the loss of her adored husband.
Now they started calling her the widow of Windsor and wears our queen and most damaging of all for Victoria and indeed the monarchy is there was this growing republican movement. People were questioning the purpose of monarchy. We never see the queen. Why are we paying all this money for a monarchy?
And I think a real crisis point was reached when a protester pinned a notice to the gates of Buckingham Palace that read something along the lines of available to let due to declining business and it made the front page of the times. So this really plunged the monarchy into one of the most dangerous crises it had ever experienced.
And let's go back a little before this stage and talk about her rule as queen for how many years did Victoria actually reign before we delve into some of the intricacies? So she came to the throne in June 1837 and she died in January 1901. So it was 63 and a half years or there about.
So record breaking. She overtook the previous longest reigning monarch George III and she was hugely celebrated for that because even though there were these moments of crisis in her reign I think longevity goes a long way and the longer you reign in general the more respect you win from your people.
And throughout this reign what do you think were the most fundamental changes or breakthroughs she did make as queen? Well I think she had such an influence on the monarchy itself. Now positively speaking she put the morality back in the monarchy and let's just say it had been at a bit of a low by the end of this endless succession of Georges that we had and her wicked uncles as they became known George IV and William IV his brother who succeeded him for a brief time as I mentioned they weren't all that keen on marriage they much preferred their mistresses and that was fairly typical of George III's children who one source has claimed had 52 illegitimate children between them quite an impressive feat.
So there was a sense that you know that the monarchy's public standing was at an all-time low by the time Victoria came to the throne she put the moral heart back into the monarchy but the other thing that she did was this was a time now when the monarch no longer ruled they reigned it was a constitutional position so it was I guess the the semblance of power without any of the reality of it and Victoria didn't try to change that but what she did was increasingly align the nation with the crown so the crown came to represent ordinary people and people's views and this was an important check and balance on government and it really made government aware of of what people on the streets were actually thinking and one prime minister I think it was Disraeli said of Victoria if I knew what the queen was thinking then nine times out of ten I knew what her people were thinking to and that was a real change this aligning of the crown and the people.
But I think the other thing that Victoria really gave the nation and gave the monarchy was the bling the pomp the pageantry the ceremony that had believe it or not been pretty shambolic by the time she came to the throne the georgies hadn't been very good at all of that there were lots of farcical catastrophes in big royal events you know tantrums thrown by monarchs in public and it was all just a bit of a fast and very embarrassing Victoria definitely restored the dignity and she restored the glamour of monarchy and she introduced so many of the ceremonies and traditions that as I said we tend to assume date back hundreds of years there are only really a couple of hundred years old and even if that actually and many of them can be laid at Victoria's door and so really I think it's with Victoria that we get a sense of not just the pomp and pageantry but the history of the British crown and I think that's what's still very much at the forefront today and and it's what's celebrated it's what's emphasized by any canny monarch.
What in your opinion was her biggest achievement?
I think Victoria's biggest achievement was to make the monarchy popular again now I mentioned her long retirement from public life more than a decade after Albert's death she still was this widow of Windsor but before that she'd been popular and after that she was popular so her anxious ministers eventually managed to persuade her to come back and resume her public duties and it was like always instantly forgiven her subjects came out to to give thanks for the Queen there was a service of Thanksgiving because her son and heir Bertie the future ed with the seventh had been had been ill and there was a service of thanksgiving for that that Victoria attended almost as the first public thing she did and from then onwards her popularity just grew and grew and not just within Britain but across what we now call the Commonwealth there were still more than the vestiges of empire in Victoria's day and of course she was made empress of India in the 1870s as well and so she was a truly international figure and because she had all of these children so nine children 42 grandchildren and 87 great-grandchildren during Victoria's lifetime I always think imagine remembering the names and the birthdays of all of those that's quite a challenge but because Victoria very cleverly married all of her relatives into the royal families of Europe she became known as the grandmother of Europe and I think her direct descendants occupied the thrones of 10 European countries so there was this complex network of royalty across Europe with Victoria at its centre so I think her legacy was popularity and and also acting as a figurehead for the monarchy as I say not just in Britain but across her empire.
On the flip side, Tracy, what do you think was Queen Victoria's biggest failing? Probably her biggest failing was giving too much authority to Albert and I think although it was the greatest tragedy of her reign when he died it was probably the best thing that could have happened to her in terms of her monarchy because people were sort of willing to tolerate Albert but they didn't see him as a king in the way that Victoria did and hoped he would be and she carried on for a little while after his death still acting as if he was there and trying to second guess what he would have done and there's a lovely quote about his dominance over Victoria being so complete that when he died she said you know when when he lived I did nothing move not a finger didn't put on a gown or bonnet if he didn't approve it and so she was going to carry on in that way just second guessing what Albert had done but eventually she she grew tired of that and she started to become her own woman and she was much more successful when she did that but I think that's her failing really was in the early part of her reign and and her marriage and probably of course that long period of retirement that was quite ill judged people respected her for mourning her husband but she took it too far and she forgot her duty and I can tell you as a historian of the monarchy if a monarch forgets their duty that's never a good thing and the people find it hard to accept but if I'm allowed another little failing and I'm sounding like I'm being very negative about Victoria I'm really not but she wasn't a great parent to her eldest son and heir Bertie now there was this weird tradition among the Hanoverian monarchs of hating their eldest son and heir it was just this thing I don't know if they didn't like to think of who was going to come after them so there was this tension between them and it was certainly true of Victoria and Bertie Bertie was the ultimate playboy prince like he completely rebelled against his straight-laced parents Victoria and Albert so he was always to be seen on the kind of French Riviera and Paris and having parties no responsibility but I think that started because he was very aware that neither Victoria nor Albert could stand him Victoria. told him he was ugly Albert called him a thorough and cunning lazy bones and so no wonder he rebelled and of course he became everything that Victoria wasn't and the Edwardian age is seen as this sort of free-for-all and lax morality and it was an age to have fun and some people enjoyed that but ultimately it didn't do the monarchy any favors and this reign came to an end in 1901
How did Queen Victoria die? So, Victoria was, you know, very long lived for the times. She celebrated her 80th birthday in 1899, her golden jubilee, her diamond jubilee. But by the turn of the century, so by the beginning of the 20th century, it was obvious that Victoria's health was starting to seriously decline. And even at her golden jubilee, she'd been so frail that she hadn't actually been able to get out of the carriage to a service of Thanksgiving in St Paul's Cathedral. So it was obvious she was plagued by arthritis, rheumatism, her eyesight was failing, and towards the end, even her famously sharp memory. She had an incredible memory, never forgot anything, but even that was starting to go towards the very end. Her waistline had expanded, she was very small in stature, she was only about four feet 11, I think, but you can see from her clothes, many of which still survive in the collection at Hampton Court Palace, the Royal Ceremonial Dress Collection, just how she was putting on weight. She liked her food, but it was probably very unhealthy the way she ate because she was notorious for eating really quickly. And anybody who ate with her had to stop eating the moment she did, so you really had to learn to eat very, very quickly, otherwise you would go hungry. And I don't think that really helped her digestion and her general health. So that by, you know, as I say, the beginning of the 20th century, her health really was in a serious decline. But it seemed unthinkable still to her people that one day, quite soon, the queen would no longer be with them. One commentator, the historian Litten Strayke, he said, "It appeared as if some monstrous reversal of the course of nature was about to take place. The vast majority of the queen's subjects could not remember a time when she had not been reigning over them." And I think those words really resonated last year when we saw the death of now the longest reigning sovereign in British history, Elizabeth II. You know, just that sense of longevity, a sense of a huge change in society because most people couldn't remember another monarch, just as in the later days of Victoria's reign. And where is Queen Victoria buried? So, Queen Victoria is buried at Windsor. And this really became the favorite burial place from King George III onwards. Henry VIII is an example of somebody earlier than that, an earlier monarch, and there are others too. But really, the Hanoverians used Windsor as the place of royal burial. They might have a funeral at Westminster Abbey, but then they would be interred at Windsor, as was Victoria's, of course, beloved husband Albert, who she loved until the day she died. Finally, Tracy, I think many of our listeners, when they think of Victoria, an image of her in her mourning black gowns will come to mind. How do you think we should remember Queen Victoria? I think we should remember Victoria as an extraordinarily strong-willed woman. She was a woman in what was still a man's world in the 19th century, and she had vision, she had ideas, she was courageous, and she did ultimately do her duty. But I think above all else, she was the one who put the pomp and pageantry at the heart of the monarchy. So I would say in a way, she made a greater contribution to the survival of the British monarchy than many, many other monarchs besides. That was Tracy Borman, a best-selling author and historian. To hear more from Tracy, you can watch her masterclass series on the history of the monarchy at historyextra.com. Thanks for listening to today's life of the week. Be sure to join us again next time to learn about another fascinating figure from the past. Hollywood A-lister Nicole Kidman will be joining me, Kathy Anne Taylor, on the Radio Times podcast this Tuesday, the 16th of January. She reveals that in her early days, she was told she would never make it because of her height and discusses how she protects herself from negative press. Plus, she speaks about the loneliness she has felt whilst traveling for work. We also discuss the importance of championing women and why intimacy coordinators are essential. Search the Radio Times podcast and click follow now to listen to the episode with Nicole Kidman available from Tuesday, the 16th of January.