How much real influence did Prince Albert have on British culture?
History Extra
Victorian Britain had been a land of nasty capitalism, where government regulation was minimal and welfare was left to the Church. With little tax burden and low labour costs, industrialisation helped Britain’s middle class thrive while the working class suffered. And the state helped safeguard trade through tough foreign policies. But Albert was a royal consort with a high level of learning in architecture & design. He ended the dissolute Hanoverian reputation and he “governed England for 21 years with a wisdom and energy such as none of our kings has ever shown" (Disraeli) .
The Royal Family in 1846 by Franz Xaver Winterhalter
Wiki
When Albert died from ?typhoid in Dec 1861 at Windsor, London’s lord mayor was told to toll St Paul’s Cathedral bells. As any widow would understand, his death left the Queen grief-stricken and she withdrew from public life. How could a vigorous 42 year old have died without warning? How would Victoria cope with all her onerous duties alone?
Albert’s death dealt the royal family a blow from which it almost didn’t recover. But why was Albert's death regarded as a national calamity? His death had come at a time of political crisis, with the British government entangled in a tense diplomatic standoff with the Northern states in the American Civil War. This had prompted Albert’s final act of public business in Dec 1861. He’d amended an aggressive despatch from Lord Palmerston after the North’s seizure of two Confederate agents from a British West Indies mail packet. Albert had warned that forcing the issue without finding a diplomatic path would mean war, soon after U.K had recovered from the disastrous Crimean War (1853-6). His mediation helped defuse a tense political situation, prompting P.M Henry Temple to stress the Prince’s value to the government.
Britain had lost Victoria's "king". The immediate public response showed the national outpouring of grief. The middle classes put themselves and their children in black: shops closed, blinds dropped, flags at half mast, theatre performances and concerts cancelled. Even the poorest rural workers put on black armbands. That 1861 Christmas was very sad.
During their 21 years of marriage Victoria and Albert had rescued the ailing monarchy and reinvigorated it for a democratic new age. The royal family became accessible to ordinary people as an example of the simple domestic virtues of monogamy, bourgeois decency and family life. It was an image that Albert had actively promoted. And he actively promoted his diverse cultural legacy.
Queen Victoria in black mourning clothes
It was clear that Victoria’s retreat from her public and her intense sorrow would not end with the normal two years of formal mourning. Bertie had caused anxiety via indiscreet affairs, and in her fury, Victoria she blamed her son and heir for Albert’s death. And with 9 children to parent alone, she retreated into paroxysms of despair, and imposed the same rigid observance of mourning on her family and staff!
Victoria focused exclusively on memorialising her husband. She turned her grieving into a formality, initiating a variety of artistic and cultural monuments commemorating Albert.
But by the mid-1860s her ministers and her own family were becoming frantic at her ongoing retreat from public view and her refusal to participate in any form of ceremonies. Anti-monarchical feeling was growing, with regular complaints that Victoria did nothing to justify her Civil List income. By the late 1860s discontent spiralled into blatant republican challenges and calls for Victoria’s abdication.
The first state ceremonial since Albert died was for Bertie Prince of Wales, a thanksgiving service at St Paul’s Cathedral in 1872. A poor assassination attempt against Victoria only rallied public sympathy FOR the Queen.
Life improved for Victoria, thanks to the support of her trusted Highland servant John Brown and, in 1874, the return of her adored Disraeli as prime minister. It was by now clear that the queen would retain her black coverage for 40 years, but as she was coaxed back into public view, she did so as a respected figure of grandmotherly dignity.
Two last questions. We know the extent of Victoria’s dependency on her late husband, both emotionally and in dealing with all the official business. But had Albert insisted on their relationship being this way and Victoria merely acceded, or had she never wanted to make all decisions? And when was Albert forgiven for being foreign?
Read: Helen Rappaport, Magnificent Obsession: Victoria, Albert and the Death that Changed the Monarchy, Hutchinson, 2011.
Albert’s death dealt the royal family a blow from which it almost didn’t recover. But why was Albert's death regarded as a national calamity? His death had come at a time of political crisis, with the British government entangled in a tense diplomatic standoff with the Northern states in the American Civil War. This had prompted Albert’s final act of public business in Dec 1861. He’d amended an aggressive despatch from Lord Palmerston after the North’s seizure of two Confederate agents from a British West Indies mail packet. Albert had warned that forcing the issue without finding a diplomatic path would mean war, soon after U.K had recovered from the disastrous Crimean War (1853-6). His mediation helped defuse a tense political situation, prompting P.M Henry Temple to stress the Prince’s value to the government.
Britain had lost Victoria's "king". The immediate public response showed the national outpouring of grief. The middle classes put themselves and their children in black: shops closed, blinds dropped, flags at half mast, theatre performances and concerts cancelled. Even the poorest rural workers put on black armbands. That 1861 Christmas was very sad.
During their 21 years of marriage Victoria and Albert had rescued the ailing monarchy and reinvigorated it for a democratic new age. The royal family became accessible to ordinary people as an example of the simple domestic virtues of monogamy, bourgeois decency and family life. It was an image that Albert had actively promoted. And he actively promoted his diverse cultural legacy.
It was only after Albert died that the nation acknowledged its debt and stopped calling him a bloody foreigner. Tragic obituaries filled the British press, many tinged with a profound sense of guilt that Albert had never been sufficiently valued in his lifetime – for his notable contributions to British culture, a patron of the arts and science.
Queen Victoria in black mourning clothes
It was clear that Victoria’s retreat from her public and her intense sorrow would not end with the normal two years of formal mourning. Bertie had caused anxiety via indiscreet affairs, and in her fury, Victoria she blamed her son and heir for Albert’s death. And with 9 children to parent alone, she retreated into paroxysms of despair, and imposed the same rigid observance of mourning on her family and staff!
Victoria focused exclusively on memorialising her husband. She turned her grieving into a formality, initiating a variety of artistic and cultural monuments commemorating Albert.
But by the mid-1860s her ministers and her own family were becoming frantic at her ongoing retreat from public view and her refusal to participate in any form of ceremonies. Anti-monarchical feeling was growing, with regular complaints that Victoria did nothing to justify her Civil List income. By the late 1860s discontent spiralled into blatant republican challenges and calls for Victoria’s abdication.
The first state ceremonial since Albert died was for Bertie Prince of Wales, a thanksgiving service at St Paul’s Cathedral in 1872. A poor assassination attempt against Victoria only rallied public sympathy FOR the Queen.
Life improved for Victoria, thanks to the support of her trusted Highland servant John Brown and, in 1874, the return of her adored Disraeli as prime minister. It was by now clear that the queen would retain her black coverage for 40 years, but as she was coaxed back into public view, she did so as a respected figure of grandmotherly dignity.
Two last questions. We know the extent of Victoria’s dependency on her late husband, both emotionally and in dealing with all the official business. But had Albert insisted on their relationship being this way and Victoria merely acceded, or had she never wanted to make all decisions? And when was Albert forgiven for being foreign?
Read: Helen Rappaport, Magnificent Obsession: Victoria, Albert and the Death that Changed the Monarchy, Hutchinson, 2011.
That is a serious grief she has for Albert
ReplyDeleteroentare
Deletemost widows grieve the loss of their husbands. The difference for this Queen was that she never wanted to do anything else for the rest of her life, except mourn in black full time.
I enjoy reading and learning about Queen Victoria, and of course when you do that you read about Albert too. I haven't read this book, but I am going to add it to my list. Thanks for sharing this. And happy weekend.
ReplyDeleteErika
DeleteThere are many interesting books written about this royal couple eg We Two: Victoria and Albert: Rulers, Partners, Rivals by Gillian Gill (2009). I chose Rappaport because she drew widely on letters, diaries and memoirs, examining the causes of Albert's death and Victoria's mission to commemorate her husband in perpetuity. Certainly obsessive!
Why did the entire nation mourn Prince Albert's great loss to the royal family, the Ministry etc? He controlled his wife's life and made her pregnant every year.
ReplyDeleteDeb
DeleteNicola Smith said that although the people had had always mistrusted him as a foreigner and never really warmed to him, on his death they felt terribly sorry for the young queen and her 9 children. Apparently theatres cancelled their performances, shops closed and bells sadly tolled.
Nine children in seventeen years?? That's a LOT of nappies!! I didn't know Queen Victoria was a recluse and didn't make any of her own decisions. I am also bothered by the fact Victoria and Albert were first cousins, a marriage shouldn't have been allowed. But if I remember correctly there was a lot of inter-family marrying, with second and third cousins? Distant cousins? Something to do with keeping the royal bloodline going?
ReplyDeleteRiver
DeleteYoung Victoria seemed to have had a tricky relationship with her mother, the widowed Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. Victoria was totally isolated from other children, did not go to a school of any sort and was alienated by her mother from outsiders who might have helped the teenager. When the young Queen saw the goodlooking Prince Albert, Victoria fell in love with her German cousin in 1836, when he and his brother visited Kensington Palace with their uncle King Leopold. She announced her engagement, without even telling her mother, and adored his body and mind for the rest of his life.
To keep the money in the family they married their 1st cousins and so on.
ReplyDeleteVictoria was really heart broken and as Bertie did all the thinking and doing when he was gone she had to do it for herself. Obviously, it took her time to sort her brain out so she could rule in her own right.
Margaret
DeleteI asked my grandmother why a few of her inlaws married cousins. Her answer was that the parents of the brides and grooms could totally trust their family, even if they had never met the children.
Although royals had different issues, Queen Victoria trusted her first cousin with every bone in her body.
An interesting read and interesting thoughts and wonderings arose. My late partner would not believe that Queen Victoria was very German.
ReplyDeleteAndrew
DeleteThe name Saxe-Coburg-Gotha came into the British Royal Family in 1840 with the marriage of Queen Victoria to Prince Albert, son of the Duke of Saxe-Coburg & Gotha. Queen Victoria herself was the last British monarch of the House of Hanover.
Thank you for telling about Prince Albert and Queen Victoria. The last Russian Tsarina Alexandra was their granddaughter.
ReplyDeleteIrina
Deletequite right. Alexandra became Empress of Russia when she married Nicholas II in Nov 1894. In fact Victoria and Albert's grandchildren occupied the thrones of 8 European countries!
It seems a little disingenuous to imply that Victoria had to parent her nine children alone, as if she had to do all the things for them that a normal parent would
ReplyDeletejabblog
ReplyDeleteThank goodness royals had a little bit of help with their children re food, clothes, bedrooms, education, dogs, going to church, holidays, toys etc etc. But imagine her body being torn apart with all those pregnancies and the beloved husband never trying to reduce the endless pain. No wonder she hated being pregnant and blamed the children, instead of the husband.
Hello Hels, Usually I (and probably lots of others) think of Victoria as the very symbol of her era, and not of her official actions as a monarch. Also it seems easy to forget that Albert had quite a few active years, and as you say virtually ran the government--somehow my first thoughts of him are as an architectural dabbler (as in the Crystal Palace and its associated exhibitions), and the namesake of the Albert Memorial and the (wonderful!) Victoria and Albert Museum. I need get this book to get the inner workings of the royal family and government of that important time, beyond the "I am Not Amused" stereotype (which does seem to show up so well in her portraits).
ReplyDelete--Jim
p.s. I recently finished reading "The Sale of the Late King's Goods" by Jerry Brotton, the king in question being Charles I. Have you read this? If not I think you would enjoy it immensely. There is just the right mixture of political background and art appreciation of the masterpieces (think Titians, Rubens, Van Dycks, and Raphaels, not to mention Holbeins and Durers) that were traded back and forth by the boatload, with plenty of intrigue and chicanery thrown in, and all taking place in the 17th century.
Parnassus
DeleteI did not recognise the name Jerry Brotton, so I looked him up and found HEAPS of his works. Bless your heart!
More from me in a short time.
Parnassus
DeletePrince Albert was not a professional architect. But he was behind most cultural icons in Victorian Britain then. Lytton Strachey wrote: the Prince opened museums, laid the foundation stones of hospitals, made speeches to the Royal Agricultural Society, and attended meetings of the British Association. He drew up careful regulations for the arrangement of The National Gallery's pictures. Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel made Albert chairman of the Royal Commission to advise the government on rebuilding the Houses of Parliament.
Prince Albert and Queen Victoria are well known, as is how the Queen would spend most of he rest of her life in mourning. He was a fascinating man who managed to get a lot done in his short life
ReplyDeleteJo-Anne
DeletePrince Albert was fascinated with engineering, architecture, foreign affairs and cultural affairs.. how is that for multi talented :)
Didn't Albert take a bullet shielding Victoria from a wannabee assassin?
ReplyDeleteHank
DeleteI know there were some attacks on Queen Victoria but I have never heard of Prince Albert taking a bullet to shield his wife. Do you have a reliable contemporary reference I can read?
Hi Hels - they were a love couple ... but had to deal with Victoria's life as Queen - I think it was a love match, she had shown herself to be independent before she became Queen ... and together they carried on. I'd say he improved our lives ... we've learnt lots from him and their time together - a different era. Cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteHilary
ReplyDeleteIt certainly was a love match. Young Victoria, who had never been loved before, saw the handsome, sexy prince and decided to marry without even telling her own mother. The love, sexual appeal and deep respect for her husband never wained over the 21 years of their marriage
One thing I heard about Albert was that he was also a composer and a good one, but his family wouldn’t let him do it. I heard some of his music on the radio. I think most of the royal families of Europe are related in one way or another. Victoria’s children took haemophilia with them as they married.
ReplyDeleteSue
DeleteThe Royal Collection Trust wrote: This collection consists of manuscript and printed music composed by Prince Albert (1819-61) during c1838-53. His compositions were mainly vocal with instrumental accompaniment, their subjects both sacred and secular. The Royal Library holds copies of his Te Deum, the large choral piece Invocazione all’Armonia, and some of his more personal compositions, written during his engagement to Queen Victoria (1839-40). Clever man!
https://albert.rct.uk/collections
An interesting read . I am pretty sure that Victoria suffered from quite severe depression . She hated being pregnant but also enjoyed sex and of course pregnancy was inevitable in those days . She resented her children and ideally would have liked to have Albert to herself . I think her early life was probably pivotal in setting her up for long periods of depression through her life and that John Brown and her Munchie were real with her and allowed her to express her feelings . Maybe they allowed her to engage in talking therapy . Albert seems to me to have been an exceptional person in many ways . His father and brother were quite different and he lost his mother to Alberts father banishing her . He went through a lot of trauma and family values were dear to his heart . he seems to have been a loving and engaged father to his children even Bertie who was a handful apparently . It is a tragedy that he died . He is someone who might have achieved a great deal more in his life . Britain was very lucky to have him .
ReplyDelete