City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Queen Victoria, daughter, wife, mother, widow, Lucy Worsley

Label
Queen Victoria, daughter, wife, mother, widow, Lucy Worsley
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
genealogical tablesillustrationsplatesportraits
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Queen Victoria
Responsibility statement
Lucy Worsley
Sub title
daughter, wife, mother, widow
Summary
Who was Queen Victoria? A little old lady, potato-like in appearance, dressed in everlasting black? Or a passionate young princess, a romantic heroine with a love of dancing? There is also a third Victoria - a woman who was also a remarkably successful queen, one who invented a new role for the monarchy. She found a way of being a respected sovereign in an age when people were deeply uncomfortable with having a woman on the throne. As well as a queen, Victoria was a daughter, a wife, a mother and a widow, and at each of these steps along life's journey she was expected to conform to what society demanded of a woman. On the face of it, she was deeply conservative. But if you look at her actions rather than her words, she was in fact tearing up the rule book for how to be female. By looking at the detail of twenty-four days of her life, through diaries, letters and more, we can see Victoria up close and personal. Examining her face-to-face, as she lived hour to hour, allows us to see, and to celebrate, the contradictions at the heart of British history's most recognisable woman
Classification

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