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Victoria and Dear Albert
In 1840 Queen Victoria married her cousin, Prince Albert. She did not want him to share her constitutional responsibilities but did want him to have some precedence. A great debate started in Parliament and Prince Albert was not allowed a seat in the Lords and was not granted the title of Prince Consort until 1857.
In 1841 the Whigs lost four by-elections. They lost a budget motion in the House and then a motion of no-confidence. On 28th August 1841 Melbourne resigned again, this time for good.
Prince Albert |
PRINCE ALBERT (1819-1861)- Prince Consort of Queen Victoria
- Born at Schloss Roseneau
- Younger son of the Duke and Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
- Educated at Bonn
- Married Victoria, his first cousin, in 1840
- Soon, Victoria, could not do without Albert's advice; he was given the title Prince Consort in 1857
- He encouraged high standards in the arts and sciences and masterminded the Great Exhibition in 1851 to celebrate the achievements of Victorian times
- Died of typhoid fever in 1861 after which, the Queen remained in her widow's weeds
Victoria's father, the Duke of Kent, was fourth in line to the throne. Even though he had three younger brothers by the law of primogeniture Victoria took precedent over those brothers and their children. Law therefore makes Prince Charles's children heirs apparent rather than the Princess Royal.
SOME 19TH CENTURY WRITERS
- Charles Dickens (1812-1870)
- William Thackeray (1811-1863)
- Charlotte Bronte (1816-1855)
- Emily Bronte (1818-1848)
- Anthony Trollope (1815-1882)
- Jane Austen (1775-1817)
- Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)
- George Eliot (1819-1880)
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1834 | Melbourne becomes Prime Minister Robert Peel becomes Prime Minister Tamworth Manifesto is announced Houses of Parliament are burned down
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1835 | Melbourne becomes Prime Minister
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1837 | William IV dies Victoria becomes Queen
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1838 | The People's Charter is issued
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1839 | The Opium War breaks out
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1840 | Victoria marries Prince Albert
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1841 | Peel becomes Prime Minister
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1842 | The Opium War ends
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1845 | The Irish famine starts
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1846 | The corn laws are repealed Russell becomes Prime Minister
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1848 | Public Health Act
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1851 | The Great Exhibition Louis Napoleon seizes power in France
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1854 | The Crimean War breaks out Florence Nightingale arrives at Scutari
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