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Family of Victoria HANOVER - Chart (As Spouse)

Family of Victoria HANOVER - Chart (As Spouse)

Albert Augustus Charles SAXE-COBURG 
1819-1861
Schloss Rosenau, Near Coburg, Germany
  Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in Court dress,  appx. 1854.
Victoria HANOVER1, 2, 3, 4
1819-19015
Kensington Palace, London, England
  The Young Queen Victoria,  1842,  by Franz Xavier Winterhalter.
Victoria Adelaide Mary Louisa 
1840-1901
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Princess Victoria,  eldest daughter of Queen Victoria.
Albert Edward WETTIN 
1841-1910
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Albert Edward,  eldest son of Queen Victoria. The Prince of Wales and later King Edward VII. Photo by W. & D. Downey,  London.
Alice Maud Mary 
1843-1878
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Princess Alice,  c. 1875. Photo by Alexander Bassano.
Alfred Ernest Albert 
1844-1900
Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England
  Prince Alfred,  2nd son of Queen Victoria.
Helena Augusta Victoria 
1846-1923
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Princess Helena,  3rd daughter of Queen Victoria. Later Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein. c. 1910.
Louise Caroline Alberta 
1848-1939
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Princess Louise,  4th daughter of Queen Victoria,  Duchess of Argyll. c. 1901.
Arthur William Patrick 
1850-1942
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Prince Arthur,  the Duke of Connaught,  3rd son of Queen Victoria.
Leopold George Duncan 
1853-1884
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Prince Leopold,  Duke of Albany,  youngest son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. c. 1880.
Beatrice Mary Victoria 
1857-1944
Buckingham, Palace, London, England
  Princess Beatrice,  youngest daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. c. 1873. Photo by Royal Photographers W & D Downey.

Notes

1. Victoria's principal advisor was her uncle King Leopold I of Belgium (her mother's brother, and the widower of Victoria's cousin, Princess Charlotte).i; [Note Record]
2. In 1840 she survived an assassination attempt when riding in a carriage with Prince Albert in London.ii; [Note Record]
3. In 1845 she personally donated £2,000 to the Irish people in the aftermath of the potato famine.iii; [Note Record]
4. Queen Victoria was the first known carrier of haemophilia in the royal family. As there are no known haemophiliacs among her ancestors, her case was either an instance of spontaneous mutation, or she was actually the illegitimate daughter of an unidentified haemophiliac male. However there is no evidence of such a liason with her mother.iv; [Note Record]
5. Flags in the United States were lowered to half-mast in her honour by order of President William McKinley, a tribute never before offered to a foreign monarch at the time and one which was repaid by Britain when McKinley was assassinated later that year.v; [Note Record]

Citations

i. Victoria: A Biography; Page 16-78; [Source Record]
ii. Queen Victoria; Page 161-165; [Source Record]
iii. Private Responses to the Famine; [Source Record]
iv. Queen Victoria's Gene; [Source Record]
v. The Times 14 September 2008; [Source Record]


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