Rating: Not rated
Tags: History, Lang:en
Summary
On 6th July 1868, when told of the birth of her seventh
granddaughter, Queen Victoria remarked that the news was
‘a very uninteresting thing for it seems to me to go on
like the rabbits in Windsor Park.’ Her apathy was
understandable – this was her fourteenth grandchild, and,
though she had given birth to nine children, she had never been
fond of babies, viewing them as ‘frog-like and rather
disgusting…particularly when undressed.’ The early
years of her marriage had, she claimed, been ruined by frequent
pregnancies; and large families were unnecessary for wealthy
people since the children would grow up with nothing worthwhile
to do. Nevertheless, her initial reaction to the birth of
Princess Victoria of Wales belied the genuine concern that
Queen Victoria felt for each of her twenty-two granddaughters.
‘As a rule,’ she wrote, ‘I like girls
best,’ and she devoted a great deal of time to their
wellbeing and happiness, showering them with an affection she
had seldom shown her own children.
** Christina Croft was born in Warwickshire, England, and grew
up in Yorkshire. Educated at Notre Dame Grammar School, Leeds,
she graduated in English and Divinity in Liverpool and obtained
teaching and nursing qualifications. She began her writing
career as a poet but moved on to biography and novels as well
as giving talks about the Romanovs, Habsburgs, Queen Victoria
and other late 19th and early 20th century royalties. Her other
interests include general history, spirituality, herbs, nature
and animals.
By 1914, through a series of dynastic marriages, the
Queen’s granddaughters included the Empress of Russia,
the Queens of Spain, Greece and Norway, and the Crown
Princesses of Roumania and Sweden. As their brothers and
cousins occupied the thrones of Germany, Britain and Denmark,
Prince Albert’s dream of a peaceful Europe created
through bonds of kinship seemed a real possibility. Yet in
little more than a decade after Queen Victoria’s death,
the Prince Consort’s dream would lie shattered in the
carnage of the First World War. Royal cousins and even siblings
would find themselves on opposing sides; two of them would die
horrifically at the hands of revolutionaries and several others
would be ousted from their thrones. They had lived through the
halcyon days of the European monarchies but their lives, like
the lives of millions of their peoples, would be changed
forever by the catastrophe played out on the battlefields of
France.Through all the upheavals, tragedies and conflicts one
person had bound them together and, even when wars had divided
their nations, to the end of their lives, they would look back
and remember ‘dearest grandmama’ with love.About the Author