History -
Queen Victoria
Victoria (queen), ), queen of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland ) and empress
of India ).
Born Alexandrina Victoria on May 24, 1819, in Kensington Palace,
London, Victoria was the daughter of Victoria Mary Louisa, daughter
of the duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld; her father was Edward Augustus,
duke of Kent and Strathern, the fourth son of George III and
youngest brother of George IV and William IV, kings of Great
Britain. Because William IV had no legitimate children, his niece
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.
Early in her reign Victoria developed a serious concern with
affairs of state, guided by her first prime minister, William
Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne. Melbourne was leader of that wing
of the Whig Party that later became known as the Liberal Party.
He exercised a strongly progressive influence on the Hpolitical
thinking of the queen.
Marriage
In 1840 Victoria was married to her first cousin, Albert, prince
of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, whom she had known for about four years.
Although this was a marriage of state, it was a highly romantic
and successful one, and Victoria was devoted to her domestic
responsibilities. The first of their nine children was Victoria
Adelaide Mary Louise, later empress of Germany. Their first son,
Albert Edward, prince of Wales and later king of Great Britain
as Edward VII, was born in 1841. When the conservative Prince
Albert convinced her that Liberal policy jeopardized the future
of the Crown, the queen began to lose her enthusiasm for the
party. After 1841, when the Melbourne government fell and Sir
Robert Peel became prime minister, Victoria was an ardent supporter
of the Conservative Party. Also under Albert's influence, she
began to question the tradition that restricted the British sovereign
to an advisory role. In 1850 she challenged the authority of
Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, foreign secretary
in the Whig government that had been in power since 1846. Her
position was that the sovereign should at least be consulted
on foreign policy. Palmerston, independent and self-assertive,
ignored the request. Their struggle reached a climax in 1851,
when the prime minister, Lord John Russell, who was also displeased
with Palmerston's arbitrary methods, dismissed him from the foreign
office. Their altercations with Palmerston, one of the most popular
political leaders in the country, caused Victoria and Albert
to lose some of the esteem of their subjects. Their popularity
dwindled even more in 1854, when they tried to avert the Crimean
War. After the war had begun, however, they gave it their wholehearted
support. In 1856, shortly before the end of the war, the queen
instituted the Victoria Cross, the highest British award for
wartime valor.
In 1857, Victoria had the title of prince consort bestowed on
Albert. Four years later he died, and she remained in virtual
mourning for much of the rest of her life. She avoided public
appearances, letting the prince of Wales fulfill most of the
royal ceremonial duties. Her detailed personal interest in the
affairs of state continued, however.
Reign After 1861
Several prime ministers served during the latter part of Victoria's
reign, but only the Conservative Party leader Benjamin Disraeli,
who held office in 1868 and from 1874 to 1880, gained her confidence.
He ingratiated himself with the queen by his cultivated personal
approach and his gift for flattery. He also allowed her a free
hand in the awarding of church, military, and some political
appointments. She fully endorsed his policy of strengthening
and extending the British Empire, and in 1876 Disraeli secured
for her the title of empress of India. She rarely agreed with
the brilliant leader of the Liberal Party, William E. Gladstone,
who served as prime minister four times between 1868 and 1894.
Victoria disapproved of the democratic reforms he enunciated,
such as abolishing the purchase of military commissions and legalizing
trade unions, and his powerful intellectualized method of argument.
She was also strongly opposed to his policy of home rule for
Ireland. The Conservative leader Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil,
3rd Marquess of Salisbury, who served as prime minister three
times between 1885 and 1902, more often found favor with the
queen. Like Disraeli, he advocated protecting British interests
and increasing British influence abroad.
British Idol
Victoria's popularity among all classes in British society reached
its height in the last two decades of her reign. Her golden jubilee
in 1887 and her diamond jubilee in 1897 were occasions for great
public rejoicing. Her subjects were then enjoying an unprecedented
period of prosperous complacency, and her enthusiastic execution
of the Boer War increased her appeal at home and abroad. Victoria
died on January 22, 1901. Her 63-year reign was the longest in
the history of England. Her descendants, including 40 grandchildren,
married into almost every royal family of Europe.
With her personal example of honesty, patriotism, and devotion
to family life, Victoria became a living symbol of the solidity
of the British Empire. The many years of her reign, often referred
to as the Victorian age, witnessed the rise of the middle class
and were marked by a deeply conservative morality and intense
nationalism.
Victoria's correspondence was published in three series, Letters,
vol., 1907), Letters, vol., 1926-1928),
and Letters, vol., 1930-32).