Queen Victoria

-
Standard Name: Victoria, Queen
Birth Name: Alexandrina Victoria
Royal Name: Queen Victoria
Titled: Queen Victoria, Empress of India
Used Form: Princess Victoria
From a young age, Queen Victoria wrote extensive journals, two of which were published with great success during her lifetime. Other selections from her journals, collections of her letters, and drawings and watercolours from her sketchbooks were published posthumously.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Dinah Mulock Craik
Dinah Mulock published Elizabeth and Victoria : From a Woman's Point of View in the feminist Victoria Magazine.
Craik, Dinah Mulock. The Unkind Word and Other Stories. Hurst and Blackett.
68
Mitchell, Sally. Dinah Mulock Craik. Twayne.
134
Textual Production Catherine Marsh
CM , as the Author of English Hearts and English Hands, Brief Memories of the First Earl Cairns, etc., etc. and together with her niece L. E. O'Rorke , commemorated Queen Victoria 's Golden Jubilee...
Textual Features Dinah Mulock Craik
Two of the essays deal directly with women's economic independence. About Money argues that every woman ought to be a woman of business
Craik, Dinah Mulock. About Money and Other Things. Macmillan.
7
because our right or wrong use of money is the utmost...
Textual Features Augusta Gregory
The overtly Nationalist play is set in 1798, the year of the Irish Rebellion, in Mayo. Cathleen, a mysterious old woman who enters the play as a wandering beggar, represents the country of Ireland...
Textual Features Harriet Beecher Stowe
She was more controversial in her defence of the Improvements in the Scottish Highlands. Much of HBS 's visit to Britain had been facilitated by the Duchess of Sutherland (Mistress of the Robes to...
Textual Features Ann Hawkshaw
The poems in this volume are generally didactic, teaching the importance of religious faith and moral virtues. The Oak Tree finds in the tree's slow growth a common parable for patience and diligence, which may...
Textual Features Lucy Walford
The volume is the source of most biographical information about Walford. It runs from her early life and ends on a high note in her literary career: her appearance in front of Queen Victoria ...
Textual Features Naomi Royde-Smith
These are cheerfully celebratory in tone. Paddington Station, Travellers and Fashions: An Unwritten Romance ends by quoting official directives not to allow Queen Victoria to be alarmed by knowing the speed of the royal...
Textual Features Millicent Garrett Fawcett
Her authors run from Jane Austen and some contemporaries to Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Harriet Martineau . Elizabeth Fry , Mary Carpenter , and Florence Nightingale represent philanthropy, Caroline Herschel and Mary Somerville science, and...
Textual Features Marina Warner
The book includes text and images gathered from over fifty albums which Queen Victoria kept from her girlhood (beginning 13 July 1832) until her death (22 July 1901). They present a multi-faceted picture of the...
Textual Features Margaret Forster
This leisurely novel centres on the relation of the present to the past, on ancestors (particularly grandmothers), and on the never-satisfied desire to know our origins. Isamay seems naive and immature: her somewhat desultory research...
Textual Features Sylvia Townsend Warner
The novel is a retelling of the story of Cupid and Psyche (or Love and the Soul) by Apuleius , with names and characteristics transposed to Victorian England. The heroine is a young orphan who...
Textual Features Dorothy Wellesley
DW 's selection, though, demonstrates a serious interest in women's literary and feminist history. Of the selections whose authors can be identified, almost half are women. Though Marguerite, Lady Blessington , doyenne of the albums...
Textual Features Dorothy Whipple
DW begins the book endearingly with her repeated commands to her self to go back in time, with the unwillingness of her self to leave the present, and the way it finally runs far away...
Textual Features Eliza Cook
The subsidiary poems, in many different (but all simple) stanza forms, deal in love, death, separation, self-sacrifice, and nostalgia. Together, love-songs and laments for times past predominate (old is a plangent word in EC

Timeline

1885: Queen Victoria sent a £500 donation to the...

Building item

1885

Queen Victoria sent a £500 donation to the Hospital for Women in Soho Square.

21 August 1885: The Criminal Law Amendment Act raised the...

National or international item

21 August 1885

The Criminal Law Amendment Act raised the age of sexual consent from thirteen to sixteen and criminalized both public and private sexual relations between males. It suppressed brothels and outlawed white slavery.

1886: Advertising handbooks were still explicitly...

Building item

1886

Advertising handbooks were still explicitly stressing that the monarch and all related topics should be rigorously avoided in advertisements.

1886: Royal Holloway College for women was founded...

Building item

1886

Royal Holloway College for women was founded at Egham in Surrey, twenty miles from London, and opened by Queen Victoria .

1886: Advertising handbooks were still explicitly...

Building item

1886

Advertising handbooks were still explicitly stressing that the monarch and all related topics should be rigorously avoided in advertisements.

1887: The institution which became Queen Mary College...

Building item

1887

The institution which became Queen Mary College was founded in London as the People's Palace .

9 April 1887: Following the appeal judgment which ordered...

Women writers item

9 April 1887

Following the appeal judgment which ordered her to cohabit with her husband, Dadaji Bhikaji , a letter by Rukhmabai appeared in the LondonTimes.

Late July 1889: The trial began in Liverpool of American...

Building item

Late July 1889

The trial began in Liverpool of American Florence Maybrick on a charge of poisoning her English husband with arsenic.

February 1890: Queen Victoria appointed twenty-two members,...

Building item

February 1890

Queen Victoria appointed twenty-two members, including royalty and commoners with experience in district nursing associations, to the Council of the Queen Victoria's Jubilee Institute for Nurses ; this group later became known as the Queen's...

By 1 November 1890: William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army,...

Building item

By 1 November 1890

William Booth , founder of the Salvation Army , published In Darkest England, and the Way Out, a call for active Christianity and social reform.

26 November 1891: A private command performance of Mascagni's...

Building item

26 November 1891

A private command performance of Mascagni 's Cavalleria Rusticana was presented at Windsor Castle for Queen Victoria .

10 May 1893: Queen Victoria opened the Imperial Institute...

Building item

10 May 1893

Queen Victoria opened the Imperial Institute of the Colonies and India in South Kensington to encourage and represent the arts, manufacturing, and commerce.

1 January 1894: The Manchester Ship Canal began operatio...

Building item

1 January 1894

The Manchester Ship Canal began operation.

10 February 1897: The Victorian Order of Nurses was founded...

Building item

10 February 1897

The Victorian Order of Nurses was founded to commemorate the Queen 's diamond jubilee.

June 1897: Composer Edward Elgar's first London success...

Building item

June 1897

Composer Edward Elgar 's first London success occurred with his Imperial March, composed for Queen Victoria 's Diamond Jubilee.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.