Summary and Analysis of Victoria: The Queen: An Intimate Biography of the Woman Who Ruled an Empire: Based on the Book by Julia Baird
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This short summary and analysis of Victoria: The Queen includes:
- Historical context
- Chapter-by-chapter overviews
- Profiles of the main characters
- Detailed timeline of key events
- Important quotes
- Fascinating trivia
- Glossary of terms
- Supporting material to enhance your understanding of the original work
Julia Baird explores and unpacks the legend of Victoria: long-reigning monarch, wife, mother, and symbol of the British Empire. Rather than contributing to the myths surrounding this fascinating and complex woman, Baird describes Victoria as she really was: passionate, strong-willed, hot-tempered, hard-working, and desperate to hold on to power and govern her nation while remaining the loyal wife to her beloved Prince Albert.
Baird’s biography takes readers through Queen Victoria’s life and long reign, giving a clear and lucid analysis of often complex political events and relationships, as well as the personal dynamics of her household, and providing a thorough understanding of a transformative era in British history.
The summary and analysis in this ebook are intended to complement your reading experience and bring you closer to a great work of nonfiction.
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Summary and Analysis of Victoria - Worth Books
Contents
Context
Overview
Summary
Timeline
Cast of Characters
Direct Quotes and Analysis
Trivia
What’s That Word?
Critical Response
About Julia Baird
For Your Information
Bibliography
Copyright
Context
Victoria: crowned when only a teenager, but fated to become one of the longest-reigning monarchs in British history, one who ruled longer than Great Britain’s previous three female queens combined. She was a complex ruler with an intimate, sometimes contentious relationship with both the populace, her advisers, and her close family—determined to govern, but also to be a devoted wife and mother.
When Victoria took the throne, Britain had a small population largely consisting of the peasant class, with limited modern technology and industrial methods. By the end of her reign, Britain had colonized large swaths of the globe, and was a modern industrial nation. Her reach, her relationship with her people, and her reforms on their behalf were unprecedented.
Julia Baird contrasts aspects of the queen’s domestic life—her relationships with her mother, husband, and children—with the onerous tasks of her day-to-day life as the ruler of one of the world’s most powerful nations. She also explores the dynamics of that rule with the multiple prime ministers who served under Victoria, such as Melbourne, the eminent Disraeli, and Gladstone. Placing the queen in a larger cultural context, Baird details her relationships with the disapproving Charles Dickens (whose works Victoria adored), historian and sometime chronicler Thomas Carlyle, nurse and inspiration Florence Nightingale (whose work in medicine greatly affected Victoria’s reforms), and, finally, poet and confidante Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
Fiery, passionate, impulsive, diligent, hard-working—the list of adjectives that can be applied to this icon of British history is long and diverse. Above all, Baird seeks to separate the real Victoria from the ubiquitous public portrayal of her as a puritanical, one-dimensional queen, which even members of her own family have sought to promote. Baird looks at letters, documents, and accounts from Victoria’s contemporaries to dissociate the real woman and monarch from the myths which have been promulgated about her—that she was a pawn of powerful men, or more interested in maternity than governance. Victoria was very human, and the dynamics between herself and the people of her time were deeply personal and complex. Her rule was singular even in the colorful annals of the British monarchy, with which the public maintains a fascination that made this book a bestseller—and its revelations about the nineteenth-century queen front-page news.
Overview
Victoria, the daughter of Edward and Victoire, Duke and Duchess of Kent, had a difficult childhood that was far from the glittering paradise one might expect for a princess fated for the crown. After her father died when she was only a few months old, her mother came to increasingly rely on her associate John Conroy, a controlling, manipulative man who sought to exercise undue power over the young princess. (Conroy, who took on the role of domineering father, was likely also her mother’s lover.) When Victoria was crowned queen upon the death of William IV (her uncle) in 1837, she immediately dismissed Conroy. She instead took Lord Melbourne, then prime minister, as adviser, with whom she maintained a strong bond: Melbourne made the young, inexperienced queen his ally, and kept her apprised of national politics and the internal mechanics of her government.
Shortly thereafter, the young queen married her German