Dallas Public Library

Becoming Victoria, Lynne Vallone

Label
Becoming Victoria, Lynne Vallone
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-245) index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
illustrationsportraits
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Becoming Victoria
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
45532523
Responsibility statement
Lynne Vallone
Summary
Just eight months old when her father, Edward, duke of Kent, died unexpectedly, the princess Victoria moved significantly closer to England's throne. The task of raising a potential female monarch assumed critical importance for the nation, yet Victoria's girlhood and adolescence have received scant attention from historians, cultural critics, and even her biographers. In this book, Lynne Vallone shows us a new Victoria-a lively and passionate girl very different from the iconic dour widow of the queen's later life. Based on a thorough exploration of the young Victoria's own letters, stories, drawings, educational materials, and journals, the book illuminates the princess's childhood from her earliest years to her accession to the throne at age eighteen in 1837. Vallone presents a fresh assessment of "the rose of England" within the culture of girlhood and domestic life in the 1820s and 1830s. The author also explores the complex and often conflicting contexts of the period, including Georgian children's literature, conventional childrearing practices, domestic and familial intrigues, and the frequently turbulent political climate. Part biography, part historical and cultural study, this richly illustrated volume uncovers in fascinating detail the childhood that Victoria actually lived
Table Of Contents
The baby in the palace, 1819-1827 -- The little princess enters education land, 1828-1832 -- Private and public princess, 1832-1834 -- The importance of being Victoria, 1835 -- 'The fair white rose of perfect womanhood', 1836-1837
Content
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