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Edward VII

Edward VII (Albert Edward; 9 November 1841 – 6 May 1910) was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Emperor of India, from 22 January 1901 until his death in 1910.

Edward VII
Photograph by W. & D. Downey, 1900s
King of the United Kingdom
and the British Dominions,
Emperor of India
Reign22 January 1901 – 6 May 1910
Coronation9 August 1902
Imperial Durbar1 January 1903
PredecessorVictoria
SuccessorGeorge V
Born(1841-11-09)9 November 1841
Buckingham Palace, London, England
Died6 May 1910(1910-05-06) (aged 68)
Buckingham Palace
Burial20 May 1910
Spouse
(m. 1863)
Issue
more...
Names
Albert Edward
HouseSaxe-Coburg and Gotha
FatherPrince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
MotherQueen Victoria
ReligionProtestant
Signature

The second child and eldest son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and nicknamed "Bertie", Edward was related to royalty throughout Europe. He was Prince of Wales and heir apparent to the British throne for almost 60 years. During the long reign of his mother, he was largely excluded from political influence and came to personify the fashionable, leisured elite. He travelled throughout Britain performing ceremonial public duties and represented Britain on visits abroad. His tours of North America in 1860 and of the Indian subcontinent in 1875 proved popular successes, but despite public approval, his reputation as a playboy prince soured his relationship with his mother.

As king, Edward played a role in the modernisation of the British Home Fleet and the reorganisation of the British Army after the Second Boer War of 1899–1902. He re-instituted traditional ceremonies as public displays and broadened the range of people with whom royalty socialised. He fostered good relations between Britain and other European countries, especially France, for which he was popularly called "Peacemaker", but his relationship with his nephew, the German Emperor Wilhelm II, was poor. The Edwardian era, which covered Edward's reign and was named after him, coincided with the start of a new century and heralded significant changes in technology and society, including steam turbine propulsion and the rise of socialism. He died in 1910 in the midst of a constitutional crisis that was resolved the following year by the Parliament Act 1911, which restricted the power of the unelected House of Lords. Edward was succeeded by his only surviving son, George V.

Early life and education

 
Portrait of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, by Winterhalter, 1846

Edward was born at 10:48 a.m. on 9 November 1841 in Buckingham Palace.[1] He was the eldest son and second child of Queen Victoria and her husband, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. He was christened Albert Edward at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, on 25 January 1842.[a] He was named Albert after his father and Edward after his maternal grandfather, Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn. He was known as Bertie to the royal family throughout his life.[3]

As the eldest son of the British sovereign, he was automatically Duke of Cornwall and Duke of Rothesay at birth. As a son of Prince Albert, he also held the titles of Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and Duke of Saxony. He was created Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester on 8 December 1841, Earl of Dublin on 17 January 1850,[4][5][b] a Knight of the Garter on 9 November 1858, and a Knight of the Thistle on 24 May 1867.[4] In 1863, he renounced his succession rights to the Duchy of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in favour of his younger brother Prince Alfred.[7]

The Queen and Prince Albert were determined that their eldest son should have an education that would prepare him to be a model constitutional monarch. At age seven, Edward embarked on a rigorous educational programme devised by Albert, and supervised by several tutors. Unlike his elder sister Victoria, he did not excel in his studies.[8] He tried to meet the expectations of his parents, but to no avail. Although Edward was not a diligent student—his true talents were those of charm, sociability and tact—Benjamin Disraeli described him as informed, intelligent and of sweet manner.[9] After the completion of his secondary-level studies, his tutor was replaced by a personal governor, Robert Bruce.

After an educational trip to Rome, undertaken in the first few months of 1859, Edward spent the summer of that year studying at the University of Edinburgh under, among others, the chemist Lyon Playfair. In October, he matriculated as an undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford.[10] Now released from the educational strictures imposed by his parents, he enjoyed studying for the first time and performed satisfactorily in examinations.[11] In 1861, he transferred to Trinity College, Cambridge,[12] where he was tutored in history by Charles Kingsley, Regius Professor of Modern History.[13] Kingsley's efforts brought forth the best academic performances of Edward's life, and Edward actually looked forward to his lectures.[14]

Early adulthood

 
Edward at Niagara Falls, 1860

In 1860, Edward undertook the first tour of North America by a Prince of Wales. His genial good humour and confident bonhomie made the tour a great success.[15] He inaugurated the Victoria Bridge, Montreal, across the St Lawrence River, and laid the cornerstone of Parliament Hill, Ottawa. He watched Charles Blondin traverse Niagara Falls by highwire, and stayed for three days with President James Buchanan at the White House. Buchanan accompanied the Prince to Mount Vernon, to pay his respects at the tomb of George Washington. Vast crowds greeted him everywhere. He met Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Prayers for the royal family were said in Trinity Church, New York, for the first time since 1776.[15] The four-month tour throughout Canada and the United States considerably boosted Edward's confidence and self-esteem, and had many diplomatic benefits for Great Britain.[16]

Edward had hoped to pursue a career in the British Army, but his mother vetoed an active military career.[17] He had been gazetted colonel on 9 November 1858[18]—to his disappointment, as he had wanted to earn his commission by examination.[11] In September 1861, Edward was sent to Germany, supposedly to watch military manoeuvres, but actually in order to engineer a meeting between him and Princess Alexandra of Denmark, the eldest daughter of Prince Christian of Denmark and his wife Louise. The Queen and Prince Albert had already decided that Edward and Alexandra should marry. They met at Speyer on 24 September under the auspices of his elder sister, Victoria, who had married the Crown Prince of Prussia in 1858.[19] Edward's sister, acting upon instructions from their mother, had met Alexandra at Strelitz in June; the young Danish princess made a very favourable impression. Edward and Alexandra were friendly from the start; the meeting went well for both sides, and marriage plans advanced.[20]

Edward gained a reputation as a playboy. Determined to get some army experience, he attended manoeuvres in Ireland, during which he spent three nights with an actress, Nellie Clifden, who was hidden in the camp by his fellow officers.[21] Prince Albert, though ill, was appalled and visited Edward at Cambridge to issue a reprimand. Albert died in December 1861 just two weeks after the visit. Queen Victoria was inconsolable, wore mourning clothes for the rest of her life and blamed Edward for his father's death.[22] At first, she regarded her son with distaste as frivolous, indiscreet and irresponsible. She wrote to her eldest daughter, "I never can, or shall, look at him without a shudder."[23]

Marriage

 
The marriage of the Prince of Wales with Princess Alexandra of Denmark, Windsor, 10 March 1863

Once widowed, Queen Victoria effectively withdrew from public life. Shortly after Prince Albert's death, she arranged for Edward to embark on an extensive tour of the Middle East, visiting Egypt, Jerusalem, Damascus, Beirut and Istanbul.[24] The British Government wanted Edward to secure the friendship of Egypt's ruler, Said Pasha, to prevent French control of the Suez Canal if the Ottoman Empire collapsed. It was the first royal tour on which an official photographer, Francis Bedford, was in attendance. As soon as Edward returned to Britain, preparations were made for his engagement, which was sealed at Laeken in Belgium on 9 September 1862.[25] Edward married Alexandra of Denmark at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, on 10 March 1863. He was 21; she was 18.

 
Edward and Alexandra on their wedding day, 1863

The couple established Marlborough House as their London residence and Sandringham House in Norfolk as their country retreat. They entertained on a lavish scale. Their marriage met with disapproval in certain circles because most of Queen Victoria's relations were German, and Denmark was at loggerheads with Germany over the territories of Schleswig and Holstein. When Alexandra's father inherited the throne of Denmark in November 1863, the German Confederation took the opportunity to invade and annex Schleswig-Holstein. The Queen was of two minds as to whether it was a suitable match, given the political climate.[26] After the marriage, she expressed anxiety about their socialite lifestyle and attempted to dictate to them on various matters, including the names of their children.[27]

 
London Bridge on the Night of the Marriage of the Prince and Princess of Wales, by William Holman Hunt (1864)

Edward had mistresses throughout his married life. He socialised with actress Lillie Langtry; Lady Randolph Churchill;[c] Daisy Greville, Countess of Warwick; actress Sarah Bernhardt; noblewoman Lady Susan Vane-Tempest; singer Hortense Schneider; prostitute Giulia Beneni (known as "La Barucci"); wealthy humanitarian Agnes Keyser; and Alice Keppel. At least fifty-five liaisons are conjectured.[29][30] How far these relationships went is not always clear. Edward always strove to be discreet, but this did not prevent society gossip or press speculation.[31] Keppel's great-granddaughter, Camilla Parker Bowles, became the mistress and subsequent wife of King Charles III, Edward's great-great-grandson. It was rumoured that Camilla's grandmother, Sonia Keppel, was fathered by Edward, but she was "almost certainly" the daughter of George Keppel, whom she resembled.[32] Edward never acknowledged any illegitimate children.[33] Alexandra was aware of his affairs, and seems to have accepted them.[34]

In 1869, Sir Charles Mordaunt, a British Member of Parliament, threatened to name Edward as co-respondent in his divorce suit. Ultimately, he did not do so but Edward was called as a witness in the case in early 1870. It was shown that Edward had visited the Mordaunts' house while Sir Charles was away sitting in the House of Commons. Although nothing further was proven and Edward denied he had committed adultery, the suggestion of impropriety was damaging.[11][35]

Heir apparent

During Queen Victoria's widowhood, Edward pioneered the idea of royal public appearances as they are understood today—for example, opening the Thames Embankment in 1871, the Mersey Tunnel in 1886, and Tower Bridge in 1894[36]—but his mother did not allow him an active role in the running of the country until 1898.[37][38] He was sent summaries of important government documents, but she refused to give him access to the originals.[11] Edward annoyed his mother, who favoured the Germans, by siding with Denmark on the Schleswig-Holstein Question in 1864 and in the same year annoyed her again by making a special effort to meet Giuseppe Garibaldi, the Italian general, patriot, and republican, who was a leader in the movement for Italian unification.[39] Liberal Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone sent him papers secretly.[11] From 1886, Foreign Secretary Lord Rosebery sent him Foreign Office despatches, and from 1892 some Cabinet papers were opened to him.[11]

In 1870 republican sentiment in Britain was given a boost when the French emperor, Napoleon III, was defeated in the Franco-Prussian War and the French Third Republic was declared.[40] However, in the winter of 1871, a brush with death led to an improvement in both Edward's popularity with the public and his relationship with his mother. While staying at Londesborough Lodge, near Scarborough, North Yorkshire, Edward contracted typhoid fever, the disease that was believed to have killed his father. There was great national concern, and one of his fellow guests (Lord Chesterfield) died. Edward's recovery was greeted with almost universal relief.[11] Public celebrations included the composition of Arthur Sullivan's Festival Te Deum. Edward cultivated politicians from all parties, including republicans, as his friends, and thereby largely dissipated any residual feelings against him.[41]

 
Edward (front left) in India, 1875–76

On 26 September 1875, Edward set off for India on an extensive eight-month tour; on the way, he visited Malta, Brindisi and Greece. His advisors remarked on his habit of treating all people the same, regardless of their social station or colour. In letters home, he complained of the treatment of the native Indians by the British officials: "Because a man has a black face and a different religion from our own, there is no reason why he should be treated as a brute."[42] Consequently, Lord Salisbury, the Secretary of State for India, issued new guidance and at least one resident was removed from office.[11] He returned to England on 11 May 1876, after stopping off at Portugal.[43] At the end of the tour, Queen Victoria was given the title Empress of India by Parliament, in part as a result of the tour's success.[44]

Edward was regarded worldwide as an arbiter of men's fashions.[45][46] He made wearing tweed, Homburg hats and Norfolk jackets fashionable, and popularised the wearing of black ties with dinner jackets, instead of white tie and tails.[47] He pioneered the pressing of trouser legs from side to side in preference to the now normal front and back creases,[48] and was thought to have introduced the stand-up turn-down shirt collar, created for him by Charvet.[49] A stickler for proper dress, he is said to have admonished Lord Salisbury for wearing the trousers of an Elder Brother of Trinity House with a Privy Councillor's coat. Deep in an international crisis, Salisbury informed the Prince that it had been a dark morning, and that "my mind must have been occupied by some subject of less importance."[50] The tradition of men not buttoning the bottom button of waistcoats is said to be linked to Edward, who supposedly left his undone because of his large girth.[11][51] His waist measured 48 inches (122 cm) shortly before his coronation.[52] He introduced the practice of eating roast beef and potatoes with horseradish sauce and yorkshire pudding on Sundays, a meal that remains a staple British favourite for Sunday lunch.[53] He was a lifelong heavy smoker, but not a heavy drinker, though he did drink champagne and, occasionally, port.[54]

Edward was a patron of the arts and sciences and helped found the Royal College of Music. He opened the college in 1883 with the words, "Class can no longer stand apart from class ... I claim for music that it produces that union of feeling which I much desire to promote."[44] At the same time, he enjoyed gambling and country sports and was an enthusiastic hunter. He ordered all the clocks at Sandringham to run half an hour ahead to provide more daylight time for shooting. This so-called tradition of Sandringham Time continued until 1936, when it was abolished by Edward VIII.[55] He also laid out a golf course at Windsor. By the 1870s the future king had taken a keen interest in horseracing and steeplechasing. In 1896, his horse Persimmon won both the Derby Stakes and the St Leger Stakes. In 1900, Persimmon's brother, Diamond Jubilee, won five races (Derby, St Leger, 2,000 Guineas Stakes, Newmarket Stakes and Eclipse Stakes)[56] and another of Edward's horses, Ambush II, won the Grand National.[57]

 
Edward (right) with his mother (centre) and Russian relations: Tsar Nicholas II (left), Empress Alexandra and baby Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna, 1896

In 1891 Edward was embroiled in the royal baccarat scandal, when it was revealed he had played an illegal card game for money the previous year. The Prince was forced to appear as a witness in court for a second time when one of the participants unsuccessfully sued his fellow players for slander after being accused of cheating.[58] In the same year Edward was involved in a personal conflict, when Lord Charles Beresford threatened to reveal details of Edward's private life to the press, as a protest against Edward interfering with Beresford's affair with Daisy Greville, Countess of Warwick. The friendship between the two men was irreversibly damaged, and their bitterness would last for the remainder of their lives.[59] Usually, Edward's outbursts of temper were short-lived, and "after he had let himself go ... [he would] smooth matters by being especially nice".[60]

In late 1891, Edward's eldest son, Albert Victor, was engaged to Princess Victoria Mary of Teck. Just a few weeks later, in early 1892, Albert Victor died of pneumonia. Edward was grief-stricken. "To lose our eldest son", he wrote, "is one of those calamities one can never really get over". Edward told Queen Victoria, "[I would] have given my life for him, as I put no value on mine".[61] Albert Victor was the second of Edward's children to die. In 1871, his youngest son, Alexander John, had died just 24 hours after being born. Edward had insisted on placing Alexander John in a coffin personally with "the tears rolling down his cheeks".[62]

On his way to Denmark through Belgium on 4 April 1900, Edward was the victim of an attempted assassination when fifteen-year-old Jean-Baptiste Sipido shot at him in protest over the Second Boer War. Sipido, though obviously guilty, was acquitted by a Belgian court because he was underage.[63] The perceived laxity of the Belgian authorities, combined with British disgust at Belgian atrocities in the Congo, worsened the already poor relations between the United Kingdom and the Continent. However, in the next ten years, Edward's affability and popularity, as well as his use of family connections, assisted Britain in building European alliances.[64]

Reign

Accession

 
Portrait by Sir Luke Fildes, 1901

When Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901, Edward became King of the United Kingdom, Emperor of India and, in an innovation, King of the British Dominions.[65] He chose to reign under the name of Edward VII, instead of Albert Edward—the name his mother had intended for him to use[d]—declaring that he did not wish to "undervalue the name of Albert" and diminish the status of his father with whom the "name should stand alone".[66] The numeral VII was occasionally omitted in Scotland, even by the national church, in deference to protests that the previous Edwards were English kings who had "been excluded from Scotland by battle".[11] J. B. Priestley recalled, "I was only a child when he succeeded Victoria in 1901, but I can testify to his extraordinary popularity. He was in fact the most popular king England had known since the earlier 1660s."[67]

 
Caricature in Puck magazine, 1901

Edward donated his parents' house, Osborne on the Isle of Wight, to the state and continued to live at Sandringham.[68] He could afford to be magnanimous; his private secretary, Sir Francis Knollys, claimed that he was the first heir to succeed to the throne in credit.[69] Edward's finances had been ably managed by Sir Dighton Probyn, Comptroller of the Household, and had benefited from advice from Edward's financier friends, some of whom were Jewish, such as Ernest Cassel, Maurice de Hirsch and the Rothschild family.[70] At a time of widespread anti-Semitism, Edward attracted criticism for openly socialising with Jews.[71][72]

Edward's coronation had originally been scheduled for 26 June 1902. However, two days before, he was diagnosed with appendicitis.[73] The disease was generally not treated operatively. It carried a high mortality rate, but developments in anaesthesia and antisepsis in the preceding 50 years made life-saving surgery possible.[74] Sir Frederick Treves, with the support of Lord Lister, performed a then-radical operation of draining a pint of pus from the infected abscess through a small incision (through 4+12-inch thickness of belly fat and abdomen wall); this outcome showed that the cause was not cancer.[75] The next day, Edward was sitting up in bed, smoking a cigar.[76] Two weeks later, it was announced that he was out of danger. Treves was honoured with a baronetcy (which the King had arranged before the operation)[77] and appendix surgery entered the medical mainstream.[74] Edward was crowned at Westminster Abbey on 9 August 1902 by the 80-year-old Archbishop of Canterbury, Frederick Temple, who died only four months later.[73]

Edward refurbished the royal palaces, reintroduced the traditional ceremonies, such as the State Opening of Parliament, that his mother had foregone, and founded new honours, such as the Order of Merit, to recognise contributions to the arts and sciences.[78] In 1902, the Shah of Persia, Mozzafar-al-Din, visited England expecting to receive the Order of the Garter. The King refused to bestow the honour on the Shah because the order was meant to be in his personal gift and the Foreign Secretary, Lord Lansdowne, had promised it without his consent. He also objected to inducting a Muslim into a Christian order of chivalry. His refusal threatened to damage British attempts to gain influence in Persia,[79] but Edward resented his ministers' attempts to reduce his traditional powers.[80] Eventually, he relented and Britain sent a special embassy to the Shah with a full Order of the Garter the following year.[81]

"Uncle of Europe"

 
Edward VII relaxing at Balmoral Castle, photographed by his wife, Alexandra

As king, Edward's main interests lay in the fields of foreign affairs and naval and military matters. Fluent in French and German, he reinvented royal diplomacy by numerous state visits across Europe.[82] He took annual holidays in Biarritz and Marienbad.[55] One of his most important foreign trips was an official visit to France in May 1903 as the guest of President Émile Loubet. Following a visit to Pope Leo XIII in Rome, this trip helped create the atmosphere for the Anglo-French Entente Cordiale, an agreement delineating British and French colonies in North Africa, and ruling out any future war between the two countries. The Entente was negotiated in 1904 between the French foreign minister, Théophile Delcassé, and the British foreign secretary, Lord Lansdowne. It marked the end of centuries of Anglo-French rivalry and Britain's splendid isolation from Continental affairs, and attempted to counterbalance the growing dominance of the German Empire and its ally, Austria-Hungary.[83]

Edward was related to nearly every other European monarch, and came to be known as the "uncle of Europe".[37] German Emperor Wilhelm II and Emperor Nicholas II of Russia were his nephews; Queen Victoria Eugenia of Spain, Crown Princess Margaret of Sweden, Crown Princess Marie of Romania, Crown Princess Sophia of Greece, and Empress Alexandra of Russia were his nieces; King Haakon VII of Norway was both his nephew and his son-in-law; kings Frederick VIII of Denmark and George I of Greece were his brothers-in-law; kings Albert I of Belgium, Ferdinand of Bulgaria, and Charles I and Manuel II of Portugal were his second cousins. Edward doted on his grandchildren, and indulged them, to the consternation of their governesses.[84] However, there was one relation whom Edward did not like: Wilhelm II. His difficult relationship with his nephew exacerbated the tensions between Germany and Britain.[85]

In April 1908, during Edward's annual stay at Biarritz, he accepted the resignation of British Prime Minister Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman. In a break with precedent, Edward asked Campbell-Bannerman's successor, H. H. Asquith, to travel to Biarritz to kiss hands. Asquith complied, but the press criticised the action of the King in appointing a prime minister on foreign soil instead of returning to Britain.[86] In June 1908, Edward became the first reigning British monarch to visit the Russian Empire, despite refusing to visit in 1906, when Anglo-Russian relations were strained in the aftermath of the Russo-Japanese War, the Dogger Bank incident, and the Tsar's dissolution of the Duma.[87] The previous month, he visited the Scandinavian countries, becoming the first British monarch to visit Sweden.[88]

Political opinions

 
Edward depicted in naval uniform by Vanity Fair magazine, 1902

While Prince of Wales, Edward had to be dissuaded from breaking with constitutional precedent by openly voting for W. E. Gladstone's Representation of the People Bill (1884) in the House of Lords.[11][89] On other matters, he was more conservative; for example, he did not favour giving votes to women,[11][90] although he did suggest that the social reformer Octavia Hill serve on the Commission for Working Class Housing.[91] He was also opposed to Irish Home Rule, instead preferring a form of dual monarchy.[11]

As Prince of Wales, Edward had come to enjoy warm and mutually respectful relations with Gladstone, whom his mother detested.[92] But the statesman's son, Home Secretary Herbert Gladstone, angered the King by planning to permit Roman Catholic priests in vestments to carry the Host through the streets of London, and by appointing two ladies, Lady Frances Balfour and May Tennant, wife of H. J. Tennant, to serve on a Royal Commission on reforming divorce law—Edward thought divorce could not be discussed with "delicacy or even decency" before ladies. Edward's biographer Philip Magnus-Allcroft suggests that Gladstone may have become a whipping-boy for the King's general irritation with the Liberal government. Gladstone was sacked in the reshuffle the following year and the King agreed, with some reluctance, to appoint him Governor-General of South Africa.[93]

Edward involved himself heavily in discussions over army reform, the need for which had become apparent with the failings of the Second Boer War.[94] He supported the redesign of army command, the creation of the Territorial Force, and the decision to provide an Expeditionary Force supporting France in the event of war with Germany.[95] Reform of the Royal Navy was also suggested, partly due to the ever-increasing Naval Estimates, and because of the emergence of the Imperial German Navy as a new strategic threat.[96] Ultimately a dispute arose between Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, who favoured increased spending and a broad deployment, and the First Sea Lord Admiral Sir John Fisher, who favoured efficiency savings, scrapping obsolete vessels, and a strategic realignment of the Royal Navy relying on torpedo craft for home defence backed by the new dreadnoughts.[97][98]

The King lent support to Fisher, in part because he disliked Beresford, and eventually Beresford was dismissed. Beresford continued his campaign outside of the navy and Fisher ultimately announced his resignation in late 1909, although the bulk of his policies were retained.[99] The King was intimately involved in the appointment of Fisher's successor as the Fisher-Beresford feud had split the service, and the only truly qualified figure known to be outside of both camps was Sir Arthur Wilson, who had retired in 1907.[100] Wilson was reluctant to return to active duty, but Edward persuaded him to do so, and Wilson became First Sea Lord on 25 January 1910.[101]

Edward was rarely interested in politics, although his views on some issues were notably progressive for the time. During his reign, he said use of the word "nigger" was "disgraceful", despite it then being in common parlance.[102] In 1904, during an Anglo-German summit in Kiel between Wilhelm II and Edward, Wilhelm with the Russo-Japanese War in mind started to go on about the "Yellow Peril", which he called "the greatest peril menacing ... Christendom and European civilisation. If the Russians went on giving ground, the yellow race would, in twenty years time, be in Moscow and Posen".[103] Wilhelm went on to attack his British guests for supporting Japan against Russia, suggesting that the British were committing "race treason". In response, Edward stated that he "could not see it. The Japanese were an intelligent, brave and chivalrous nation, quite as civilised as the Europeans, from whom they only differed by the pigmentation of their skin".[103] Although Edward lived a life of luxury often far removed from that of the majority of his subjects, they expected it, and his personal charm with all levels of society and his strong condemnation of prejudice went some way to assuage republican and racial tensions building during his lifetime.[11]

Constitutional crisis

 
Profile of Edward VII on a halfpenny, 1902

In the last year of his life, Edward became embroiled in a constitutional crisis when the Conservative majority in the House of Lords refused to pass the "People's Budget" proposed by the Liberal government of Prime Minister Asquith. The crisis eventually led—after Edward's death—to the removal of the Lords' right to veto legislation.

The King was displeased at Liberal attacks on the peers, which included a polemical speech by David Lloyd George at Limehouse.[104] Cabinet minister Winston Churchill publicly demanded a general election, for which Asquith apologised to the King's adviser Lord Knollys and rebuked Churchill at a Cabinet meeting. Edward was so dispirited at the tone of class warfare—although Asquith told him that party rancour had been just as bad over the First Home Rule Bill in 1886—that he introduced his son to Secretary of State for War Richard Haldane as "the last King of England".[105] After the King's horse Minoru won the Derby on 26 July 1909, he returned to the racetrack the following day, and laughed when a man shouted: "Now, King. You've won the Derby. Go back home and dissolve this bloody Parliament!"[106]

In vain, the King urged Conservative leaders Arthur Balfour and Lord Lansdowne to pass the Budget, which Lord Esher had advised him was not unusual, as Queen Victoria had helped to broker agreements between the two Houses over Irish disestablishment in 1869 and the Third Reform Act in 1884.[107] On Asquith's advice, however, he did not offer them an election (at which, to judge from recent by-elections, they were likely to gain seats) as a reward for doing so.[108]

The Finance Bill passed the Commons on 5 November 1909, but was rejected by the Lords on 30 November; they instead passed a resolution of Lord Lansdowne's stating that they were entitled to oppose the bill as it lacked an electoral mandate. The King was annoyed that his efforts to urge passage of the budget had become public knowledge[109] and had forbidden Knollys, who was an active Liberal peer, from voting for the budget, although Knollys had suggested that this would be a suitable gesture to indicate royal desire to see the Budget pass.[110] In December 1909, a proposal to create peers (to give the Liberals a majority in the Lords) or give the prime minister the right to do so was considered "outrageous" by Knollys, who thought the King should abdicate rather than agree to it.[111]

The January 1910 election was dominated by talk of removing the Lords' veto. During the election campaign Lloyd George talked of "guarantees" and Asquith of "safeguards" that would be necessary before forming another Liberal government, but the King informed Asquith that he would not be willing to contemplate creating peers until after a second general election.[11][112] Balfour refused to be drawn on whether or not he would be willing to form a Conservative government, but advised the King not to promise to create peers until he had seen the terms of any proposed constitutional change.[113] During the campaign the leading Conservative Walter Long had asked Knollys for permission to state that the King did not favour Irish Home Rule, but Knollys refused on the grounds that it was not appropriate for the monarch's views to be known in public.[114]

The election resulted in a hung parliament, with the Liberal government dependent on the support of the third largest party, the nationalist Irish Parliamentary Party. The King suggested a compromise whereby only 50 peers from each side would be allowed to vote, which would also obviate the large Conservative majority in the Lords, but Lord Crewe, Liberal leader in the Lords, advised that this would reduce the Lords' independence, as only peers who were loyal party supporters would be picked.[114] Pressure to remove the Lords' veto now came from the Irish nationalist MPs, who wanted to remove the Lords' ability to block the introduction of Home Rule. They threatened to vote against the Budget unless they had their way (an attempt by Lloyd George to win their support by amending whiskey duties was abandoned as the Cabinet felt this would recast the Budget too much). Asquith now revealed that there were no "guarantees" for the creation of peers. The Cabinet considered resigning and leaving it up to Balfour to try to form a Conservative government.[115]

The King's Speech from the Throne on 21 February made reference to introducing measures restricting the Lords' power of veto to one of delay, but Asquith inserted a phrase "in the opinion of my advisers" so the King could be seen to be distancing himself from the planned legislation.[116] The Commons passed resolutions on 14 April that would form the basis for the 1911 Parliament Act: to remove the power of the Lords to veto money bills, to replace their veto of other bills with a power to delay, and to reduce the term of Parliament from seven years to five (the King would have preferred four[113]). But in that debate Asquith hinted—to ensure the support of the nationalist MPs—that he would ask the King to break the deadlock "in that Parliament" (i.e. contrary to Edward's earlier stipulation that there be a second election). The Budget was passed by both Commons and Lords in April.[117]

By April the Palace was having secret talks with Balfour and Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury, who both advised that the Liberals did not have sufficient mandate to demand the creation of peers. The King thought the whole proposal "simply disgusting" and that the government was "in the hands of Redmond & Co". Lord Crewe announced publicly that the government's wish to create peers should be treated as formal "ministerial advice" (which, by convention, the monarch must accept) although Lord Esher argued that the monarch was entitled in extremis to dismiss the government rather than take their "advice".[118] Esher's view has been called "obsolete and unhelpful".[119]

Death

 
The body of the King in his deathbed, May 1910

Edward habitually smoked twenty cigarettes and twelve cigars a day. In 1907, a rodent ulcer, a type of cancer affecting the skin next to his nose, was cured with radium.[120] Towards the end of his life he increasingly suffered from bronchitis.[11] He suffered a momentary loss of consciousness during a state visit to Berlin in February 1909.[121] In March 1910, he was staying at Biarritz when he collapsed. He remained there to convalesce, while in London Asquith tried to get the Finance Bill passed. The King's continued ill health was unreported, and he attracted criticism for staying in France while political tensions were so high.[11] On 27 April he returned to Buckingham Palace, still suffering from severe bronchitis. Alexandra returned from visiting her brother, George I of Greece, in Corfu a week later on 5 May.

On 6 May, Edward suffered several heart attacks, but refused to go to bed, saying, "No, I shall not give in; I shall go on; I shall work to the end."[122] Between moments of faintness, his son the Prince of Wales (shortly to be King George V) told him that his horse, Witch of the Air, had won at Kempton Park that afternoon. The King replied, "Yes, I have heard of it. I am very glad": his final words.[11] At 11:30 p.m. he lost consciousness for the last time and was put to bed. He died 15 minutes later.[122]

Alexandra refused to allow Edward's body to be moved for eight days afterwards, though she allowed small groups of visitors to enter his room.[123] On 11 May, the late king was dressed in his uniform and placed in a massive oak coffin, which was moved on 14 May to the throne room, where it was sealed and lay in state, with a guardsman standing at each corner of the bier. Despite the time that had elapsed since his death, Alexandra noted the King's body remained "wonderfully preserved".[124] On the morning of 17 May, the coffin was placed on a gun carriage and drawn by black horses to Westminster Hall, with the new king, his family and Edward's favourite dog, Caesar, walking behind. Following a brief service, the royal family left, and the hall was opened to the public; over 400,000 people filed past the coffin over the next two days.[125] As Barbara Tuchman noted in The Guns of August, his funeral, held on 20 May 1910, marked "the greatest assemblage of royalty and rank ever gathered in one place and, of its kind, the last." A royal train conveyed the King's coffin from London to Windsor Castle, where Edward was buried at St George's Chapel.[126]

Legacy

Statues of Edward can be found throughout the former empire.

Before his accession to the throne, Edward was the longest-serving heir apparent in British history. He was surpassed by his great-great-grandson Charles III on 20 April 2011.[127] The title Prince of Wales is not automatically held by the heir apparent; it is bestowed by the reigning monarch at a time of his or her choosing.[128] Edward was the longest-serving holder of that title until surpassed by Charles on 9 September 2017.[129] Edward was Prince of Wales between 8 December 1841 and 22 January 1901 (59 years, 45 days); Charles held the title between 26 July 1958 and 8 September 2022 (64 years, 44 days).[128][130][131]

As king, Edward VII proved a greater success than anyone had expected,[132] but he was already past the average life expectancy and had little time left to fulfil the role. In his short reign, he ensured that his second son and heir, George V, was better prepared to take the throne. Contemporaries described their relationship as more like affectionate brothers than father and son,[133] and on Edward's death George wrote in his diary that he had lost his "best friend and the best of fathers ... I never had a [cross] word with him in my life. I am heart-broken and overwhelmed with grief".[134]

Edward has been recognised as the first truly constitutional British sovereign and the last sovereign to wield effective political power.[135] Though lauded as "Peacemaker",[136] he had been afraid that German Emperor Wilhelm II, who was one of his nephews, would tip Europe into war.[137] Four years after Edward's death, the First World War broke out. The naval reforms he had supported and his part in securing the Triple Entente between Britain, France, and Russia, as well as his relationships with his extended family, fed the paranoia of the German Emperor, who blamed Edward for the war.[138] Publication of the official biography of Edward was delayed until 1927 by its author, Sidney Lee, who feared German propagandists would select material to portray Edward as an anti-German warmonger.[139] Lee was also hampered by the extensive destruction of Edward's personal papers; Edward had left orders that all his letters should be burned on his death.[140] Subsequent biographers have been able to construct a more rounded picture of Edward by using material and sources that were unavailable to Lee.[141]

Historian R. C. K. Ensor, writing in 1936, praised the King's political personality:

...he had in many respects great natural ability. He knew how to be both dignified and charming; he had an excellent memory; and his tact in handling people was quite exceptional. He had a store of varied, though unsystematized, knowledge gathered at first-hand through talking to all sorts of eminent men. His tastes were not particularly elevated, but they were thoroughly English; and he showed much (though not unfailing) comprehension for the common instincts of the people over whom he reigned. This was not the less remarkable because, though a good linguist in French and German, he never learned to speak English without a German accent.[142]

Ensor rejects the widespread notion that the King exerted an important influence on British foreign policy, believing he gained that reputation by making frequent trips abroad, with many highly publicized visits to foreign courts. Ensor thought surviving documents showed "how comparatively crude his views on foreign policy were, how little he read, and of what naïve indiscretions he was capable."[143] Edward received criticism for his apparent pursuit of self-indulgent pleasure, but he received great praise for his affable manners and diplomatic tact. As his grandson Edward VIII wrote, "his lighter side ... obscured the fact that he had both insight and influence."[144] "He had a tremendous zest for pleasure but he also had a real sense of duty", wrote J. B. Priestley.[145] Lord Esher wrote that Edward VII was "kind and debonair and not undignified—but too human".[146]

Honours

British honours[5]
Foreign honours
 
Armorial achievement of the Spanish Army 62nd Regiment of Infantry "Arapiles".
King Edward's cypher and the name of the British Army unit that played a prominent role in the Battle of Salamanca were added at the beginning of the Peninsular War Centenary (1908).[163]

Honorary foreign military appointments

Arms

 
Shortly after Edward's accession, he proposed an alternate version of the Royal Standard for use by the Sovereign, defaced in the centre with a purple oval containing the cypher and crown of the reigning monarch. However, he was persuaded that such a proposal was impractical.[207]

Edward's coat of arms as the Prince of Wales was the royal arms differenced by a label of three points argent, and an inescutcheon of the Duchy of Saxony, representing his paternal arms. When he acceded as King, he gained the royal arms undifferenced.[208]

 
 
 
 
Coat of arms as Prince of Wales, 1841–1901 Royal coat of arms outside Scotland Royal coat of arms in Scotland Royal cypher

Issue

Name Birth Death Marriage/notes
Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale 8 January 1864 14 January 1892 (aged 28) engaged 1891, to Princess Victoria Mary of Teck
George V 3 June 1865 20 January 1936 (aged 70) 1893, Princess Victoria Mary of Teck; had issue including Edward VIII and George VI
Louise, Princess Royal 20 February 1867 4 January 1931 (aged 63) 1889, Alexander Duff, 1st Duke of Fife; had issue
Princess Victoria 6 July 1868 3 December 1935 (aged 67) never married and without issue
Princess Maud 26 November 1869 20 November 1938 (aged 68) 1896, Prince Carl of Denmark (King of Norway as Haakon VII from 1905); had issue including Prince Alexander (later Olav V)
Prince Alexander John of Wales 6 April 1871 7 April 1871 born and died at Sandringham House

Ancestry

See also

Notes

  1. ^ His godparents were the King of Prussia, his paternal step-grandmother the Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (for whom the Duchess of Kent, his maternal grandmother, stood proxy), his great-uncle the Duke of Cambridge, his step-great-grandmother the Dowager Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Altenburg (for whom the Duchess of Cambridge, his great-aunt, stood proxy), his great-aunt Princess Sophia (for whom Princess Augusta of Cambridge, his first cousin once-removed, stood proxy) and his great-uncle Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.[2]
  2. ^ Gazetted on 10 September 1849.[6]
  3. ^ Letters written by Edward to Lady Randolph may have "signified no more than a flirtation" but were "[w]ritten in a strain of undue familiarity".[28]
  4. ^ No English or British sovereign has ever reigned under a double name.

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  202. ^ a b c d "The German Emperor and the King" (28 June 1902) The Times Issue 36806, p. 5
  203. ^ "The Coronation" (3 June 1902) The Times Issue 36784, p. 10
  204. ^ a b c "Muerte del Rey Eduardo VII 31 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine" (7 May 1910) ABC (1st ed.), p. 12, retrieved 28 April 2016
  205. ^ Svensk rikskalender (in Swedish), 1908, p. 229, from the original on 9 July 2019, retrieved 20 February 2019 – via runeberg.org
  206. ^ Svensk rikskalender (in Swedish), 1909, p. 155, from the original on 24 December 2019, retrieved 20 February 2019 – via runeberg.org
  207. ^ David Prothero (12 April 2007). "British Royal Flags, Reign of Edward VII: Proposal for a Personal Royal Standard of King Edward VII". Flags of the World. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  208. ^ Velde, François (19 April 2008), Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family, Heraldica, from the original on 17 March 2018, retrieved 2 May 2010
  209. ^ Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh (ed.) (1977). Burke's Royal Families of the World, 1st edition. London: Burke's Peerage
  210. ^ Huberty, M., Giraud, A., Magdelaine, F. & B. (1976–1994). L'Allemagne Dynastique, Vols I–VII. Le Perreux, France: Alain Giraud
  211. ^ Louda, Jiří; Maclagan, Michael (1999), Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, London: Little, Brown, p. 34, ISBN 978-1-85605-469-0

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Andrews, Allen (1975), The Follies of King Edward VII, Lexington, ISBN 978-0-904312-15-7
  • Aubyn, Giles St (1979), Edward VII, Prince and King, Atheneum, ISBN 978-0-689-10937-9
  • Beer, Peter (2016), Playboy Princes: The Apprentice Years of Edward VII and VIII, Peter Owen
  • Buckner, Phillip (2003), "Casting daylight upon magic: Deconstructing the royal tour of 1901 to Canada", Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 31 (2): 158–189, doi:10.1080/03086530310001705656, S2CID 162347515
  • Butler, David (1975), Edward VII, Prince of Hearts, Littlehampton Book Services Ltd, ISBN 978-0-297-76897-5
  • Cornwallis, Kinahan (2009) [1860], Royalty in the New World: Or, the Prince of Wales in America, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1-108-00298-1
  • Cowles, Virginia (1956), Edward VII and his Circle, H. Hamilton
  • Farrer, James Anson (1912), England Under Edward VII, Allen & Unwin
  • Glencross, Matthew (2016), The State Visits of Edward VII: Reinventing Royal Diplomacy for the Twentieth Century, Palgrave Macmillan
  • Hibbert, Christopher (2007), Edward VII: The Last Victorian King, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-1-4039-8377-0
  • Neilson, Francis (1957), "Edward VII and the Entente Cordiale, I.", American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 16 (4): 353–368, doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.1957.tb00197.x, JSTOR 3484884
  • Plumptre, George (1997), Edward VII, Trafalgar Square Publishing, ISBN 978-1-85793-846-3
  • Ponsonby, Frederick (1951), Recollections of Three Reigns, London: Eyre & Spottiswoode
  • Ridley, Jane (2013), "'The Sport of Kings': Shooting and The Court of Edward VII", The Court Historian, 18 (2): 189–205, doi:10.1179/cou.2013.18.2.004, S2CID 159750104
  • Ridley, Jane (2016), "Bertie Prince of Wales: Prince Hal and the Widow of Windsor", Royal Heirs and the Uses of Soft Power in Nineteenth-Century Europe, London: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 123–138
  • Roby, Kinley E. (1975), The King, the Press and the People: A Study of Edward VII, Barrie and Jenkins, ISBN 978-0-214-20098-4
  • Ryan, A. P. (1953), "The Diplomacy of Edward VII", History Today, vol. 3, no. 5, pp. 352–360
  • Tuchman, Barbara (1964), The Guns of August, New York: Macmillan
  • Walker, Richard (1988), The Savile Row Story: An Illustrated History, London: Prion, ISBN 978-1-85375-000-7
  • Watson, Alfred Edward Thomas (1911), King Edward VII. as a sportsman, Longmans, Green and Company
  • Weintraub, Stanley (2001), Edward the Caresser: The Playboy Prince Who Became Edward VII, Free Press, ISBN 978-0-684-85318-5

External links

Listen to this article (47 minutes)
 
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Edward VII
Cadet branch of the House of Wettin
Born: 9 November 1841 Died: 6 May 1910
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions
Emperor of India

22 January 1901 – 6 May 1910
Succeeded by
British royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
George (IV)
Prince of Wales
Duke of Cornwall
Duke of Rothesay

1841–1901
Succeeded by
Military offices
Preceded by
The Earl Beauchamp
Colonel of the 10th (Prince of Wales's Own Royal) Hussars
1863–1901
Succeeded by
Lord Ralph Drury Kerr
Masonic offices
Preceded by Grand Master of the United
Grand Lodge of England

1874–1901
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Albert, Prince Consort
Great Master of the Bath
1897–1901
Succeeded by

edward, other, uses, disambiguation, albert, edward, november, 1841, 1910, king, united, kingdom, great, britain, ireland, emperor, india, from, january, 1901, until, death, 1910, photograph, downey, 1900sking, united, kingdomand, british, dominions, emperor, . For other uses see Edward VII disambiguation Edward VII Albert Edward 9 November 1841 6 May 1910 was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Emperor of India from 22 January 1901 until his death in 1910 Edward VIIPhotograph by W amp D Downey 1900sKing of the United Kingdomand the British Dominions Emperor of IndiaReign22 January 1901 6 May 1910Coronation9 August 1902Imperial Durbar1 January 1903PredecessorVictoriaSuccessorGeorge VBorn 1841 11 09 9 November 1841Buckingham Palace London EnglandDied6 May 1910 1910 05 06 aged 68 Buckingham PalaceBurial20 May 1910St George s Chapel Windsor CastleSpouseAlexandra of Denmark m 1863 wbr Issuemore Prince Albert Victor Duke of Clarence and Avondale George V Louise Princess Royal Princess Victoria Maud Queen of Norway Prince Alexander John of WalesNamesAlbert EdwardHouseSaxe Coburg and GothaFatherPrince Albert of Saxe Coburg and GothaMotherQueen VictoriaReligionProtestantSignatureThe second child and eldest son of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha and nicknamed Bertie Edward was related to royalty throughout Europe He was Prince of Wales and heir apparent to the British throne for almost 60 years During the long reign of his mother he was largely excluded from political influence and came to personify the fashionable leisured elite He travelled throughout Britain performing ceremonial public duties and represented Britain on visits abroad His tours of North America in 1860 and of the Indian subcontinent in 1875 proved popular successes but despite public approval his reputation as a playboy prince soured his relationship with his mother As king Edward played a role in the modernisation of the British Home Fleet and the reorganisation of the British Army after the Second Boer War of 1899 1902 He re instituted traditional ceremonies as public displays and broadened the range of people with whom royalty socialised He fostered good relations between Britain and other European countries especially France for which he was popularly called Peacemaker but his relationship with his nephew the German Emperor Wilhelm II was poor The Edwardian era which covered Edward s reign and was named after him coincided with the start of a new century and heralded significant changes in technology and society including steam turbine propulsion and the rise of socialism He died in 1910 in the midst of a constitutional crisis that was resolved the following year by the Parliament Act 1911 which restricted the power of the unelected House of Lords Edward was succeeded by his only surviving son George V Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early adulthood 2 1 Marriage 3 Heir apparent 4 Reign 4 1 Accession 4 2 Uncle of Europe 4 3 Political opinions 4 4 Constitutional crisis 5 Death 6 Legacy 7 Honours 7 1 Honorary foreign military appointments 7 2 Arms 8 Issue 9 Ancestry 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and education Edit Portrait of Albert Edward Prince of Wales by Winterhalter 1846 Edward was born at 10 48 a m on 9 November 1841 in Buckingham Palace 1 He was the eldest son and second child of Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha He was christened Albert Edward at St George s Chapel Windsor Castle on 25 January 1842 a He was named Albert after his father and Edward after his maternal grandfather Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn He was known as Bertie to the royal family throughout his life 3 As the eldest son of the British sovereign he was automatically Duke of Cornwall and Duke of Rothesay at birth As a son of Prince Albert he also held the titles of Prince of Saxe Coburg and Gotha and Duke of Saxony He was created Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester on 8 December 1841 Earl of Dublin on 17 January 1850 4 5 b a Knight of the Garter on 9 November 1858 and a Knight of the Thistle on 24 May 1867 4 In 1863 he renounced his succession rights to the Duchy of Saxe Coburg and Gotha in favour of his younger brother Prince Alfred 7 The Queen and Prince Albert were determined that their eldest son should have an education that would prepare him to be a model constitutional monarch At age seven Edward embarked on a rigorous educational programme devised by Albert and supervised by several tutors Unlike his elder sister Victoria he did not excel in his studies 8 He tried to meet the expectations of his parents but to no avail Although Edward was not a diligent student his true talents were those of charm sociability and tact Benjamin Disraeli described him as informed intelligent and of sweet manner 9 After the completion of his secondary level studies his tutor was replaced by a personal governor Robert Bruce After an educational trip to Rome undertaken in the first few months of 1859 Edward spent the summer of that year studying at the University of Edinburgh under among others the chemist Lyon Playfair In October he matriculated as an undergraduate at Christ Church Oxford 10 Now released from the educational strictures imposed by his parents he enjoyed studying for the first time and performed satisfactorily in examinations 11 In 1861 he transferred to Trinity College Cambridge 12 where he was tutored in history by Charles Kingsley Regius Professor of Modern History 13 Kingsley s efforts brought forth the best academic performances of Edward s life and Edward actually looked forward to his lectures 14 Early adulthood Edit Edward at Niagara Falls 1860 In 1860 Edward undertook the first tour of North America by a Prince of Wales His genial good humour and confident bonhomie made the tour a great success 15 He inaugurated the Victoria Bridge Montreal across the St Lawrence River and laid the cornerstone of Parliament Hill Ottawa He watched Charles Blondin traverse Niagara Falls by highwire and stayed for three days with President James Buchanan at the White House Buchanan accompanied the Prince to Mount Vernon to pay his respects at the tomb of George Washington Vast crowds greeted him everywhere He met Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Ralph Waldo Emerson and Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr Prayers for the royal family were said in Trinity Church New York for the first time since 1776 15 The four month tour throughout Canada and the United States considerably boosted Edward s confidence and self esteem and had many diplomatic benefits for Great Britain 16 Edward had hoped to pursue a career in the British Army but his mother vetoed an active military career 17 He had been gazetted colonel on 9 November 1858 18 to his disappointment as he had wanted to earn his commission by examination 11 In September 1861 Edward was sent to Germany supposedly to watch military manoeuvres but actually in order to engineer a meeting between him and Princess Alexandra of Denmark the eldest daughter of Prince Christian of Denmark and his wife Louise The Queen and Prince Albert had already decided that Edward and Alexandra should marry They met at Speyer on 24 September under the auspices of his elder sister Victoria who had married the Crown Prince of Prussia in 1858 19 Edward s sister acting upon instructions from their mother had met Alexandra at Strelitz in June the young Danish princess made a very favourable impression Edward and Alexandra were friendly from the start the meeting went well for both sides and marriage plans advanced 20 Edward gained a reputation as a playboy Determined to get some army experience he attended manoeuvres in Ireland during which he spent three nights with an actress Nellie Clifden who was hidden in the camp by his fellow officers 21 Prince Albert though ill was appalled and visited Edward at Cambridge to issue a reprimand Albert died in December 1861 just two weeks after the visit Queen Victoria was inconsolable wore mourning clothes for the rest of her life and blamed Edward for his father s death 22 At first she regarded her son with distaste as frivolous indiscreet and irresponsible She wrote to her eldest daughter I never can or shall look at him without a shudder 23 Marriage Edit Main article Wedding of Albert Edward Prince of Wales and Princess Alexandra of Denmark The marriage of the Prince of Wales with Princess Alexandra of Denmark Windsor 10 March 1863 Once widowed Queen Victoria effectively withdrew from public life Shortly after Prince Albert s death she arranged for Edward to embark on an extensive tour of the Middle East visiting Egypt Jerusalem Damascus Beirut and Istanbul 24 The British Government wanted Edward to secure the friendship of Egypt s ruler Said Pasha to prevent French control of the Suez Canal if the Ottoman Empire collapsed It was the first royal tour on which an official photographer Francis Bedford was in attendance As soon as Edward returned to Britain preparations were made for his engagement which was sealed at Laeken in Belgium on 9 September 1862 25 Edward married Alexandra of Denmark at St George s Chapel Windsor Castle on 10 March 1863 He was 21 she was 18 Edward and Alexandra on their wedding day 1863 The couple established Marlborough House as their London residence and Sandringham House in Norfolk as their country retreat They entertained on a lavish scale Their marriage met with disapproval in certain circles because most of Queen Victoria s relations were German and Denmark was at loggerheads with Germany over the territories of Schleswig and Holstein When Alexandra s father inherited the throne of Denmark in November 1863 the German Confederation took the opportunity to invade and annex Schleswig Holstein The Queen was of two minds as to whether it was a suitable match given the political climate 26 After the marriage she expressed anxiety about their socialite lifestyle and attempted to dictate to them on various matters including the names of their children 27 London Bridge on the Night of the Marriage of the Prince and Princess of Wales by William Holman Hunt 1864 Edward had mistresses throughout his married life He socialised with actress Lillie Langtry Lady Randolph Churchill c Daisy Greville Countess of Warwick actress Sarah Bernhardt noblewoman Lady Susan Vane Tempest singer Hortense Schneider prostitute Giulia Beneni known as La Barucci wealthy humanitarian Agnes Keyser and Alice Keppel At least fifty five liaisons are conjectured 29 30 How far these relationships went is not always clear Edward always strove to be discreet but this did not prevent society gossip or press speculation 31 Keppel s great granddaughter Camilla Parker Bowles became the mistress and subsequent wife of King Charles III Edward s great great grandson It was rumoured that Camilla s grandmother Sonia Keppel was fathered by Edward but she was almost certainly the daughter of George Keppel whom she resembled 32 Edward never acknowledged any illegitimate children 33 Alexandra was aware of his affairs and seems to have accepted them 34 In 1869 Sir Charles Mordaunt a British Member of Parliament threatened to name Edward as co respondent in his divorce suit Ultimately he did not do so but Edward was called as a witness in the case in early 1870 It was shown that Edward had visited the Mordaunts house while Sir Charles was away sitting in the House of Commons Although nothing further was proven and Edward denied he had committed adultery the suggestion of impropriety was damaging 11 35 Heir apparent EditDuring Queen Victoria s widowhood Edward pioneered the idea of royal public appearances as they are understood today for example opening the Thames Embankment in 1871 the Mersey Tunnel in 1886 and Tower Bridge in 1894 36 but his mother did not allow him an active role in the running of the country until 1898 37 38 He was sent summaries of important government documents but she refused to give him access to the originals 11 Edward annoyed his mother who favoured the Germans by siding with Denmark on the Schleswig Holstein Question in 1864 and in the same year annoyed her again by making a special effort to meet Giuseppe Garibaldi the Italian general patriot and republican who was a leader in the movement for Italian unification 39 Liberal Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone sent him papers secretly 11 From 1886 Foreign Secretary Lord Rosebery sent him Foreign Office despatches and from 1892 some Cabinet papers were opened to him 11 In 1870 republican sentiment in Britain was given a boost when the French emperor Napoleon III was defeated in the Franco Prussian War and the French Third Republic was declared 40 However in the winter of 1871 a brush with death led to an improvement in both Edward s popularity with the public and his relationship with his mother While staying at Londesborough Lodge near Scarborough North Yorkshire Edward contracted typhoid fever the disease that was believed to have killed his father There was great national concern and one of his fellow guests Lord Chesterfield died Edward s recovery was greeted with almost universal relief 11 Public celebrations included the composition of Arthur Sullivan s Festival Te Deum Edward cultivated politicians from all parties including republicans as his friends and thereby largely dissipated any residual feelings against him 41 Edward front left in India 1875 76 On 26 September 1875 Edward set off for India on an extensive eight month tour on the way he visited Malta Brindisi and Greece His advisors remarked on his habit of treating all people the same regardless of their social station or colour In letters home he complained of the treatment of the native Indians by the British officials Because a man has a black face and a different religion from our own there is no reason why he should be treated as a brute 42 Consequently Lord Salisbury the Secretary of State for India issued new guidance and at least one resident was removed from office 11 He returned to England on 11 May 1876 after stopping off at Portugal 43 At the end of the tour Queen Victoria was given the title Empress of India by Parliament in part as a result of the tour s success 44 Edward was regarded worldwide as an arbiter of men s fashions 45 46 He made wearing tweed Homburg hats and Norfolk jackets fashionable and popularised the wearing of black ties with dinner jackets instead of white tie and tails 47 He pioneered the pressing of trouser legs from side to side in preference to the now normal front and back creases 48 and was thought to have introduced the stand up turn down shirt collar created for him by Charvet 49 A stickler for proper dress he is said to have admonished Lord Salisbury for wearing the trousers of an Elder Brother of Trinity House with a Privy Councillor s coat Deep in an international crisis Salisbury informed the Prince that it had been a dark morning and that my mind must have been occupied by some subject of less importance 50 The tradition of men not buttoning the bottom button of waistcoats is said to be linked to Edward who supposedly left his undone because of his large girth 11 51 His waist measured 48 inches 122 cm shortly before his coronation 52 He introduced the practice of eating roast beef and potatoes with horseradish sauce and yorkshire pudding on Sundays a meal that remains a staple British favourite for Sunday lunch 53 He was a lifelong heavy smoker but not a heavy drinker though he did drink champagne and occasionally port 54 Edward was a patron of the arts and sciences and helped found the Royal College of Music He opened the college in 1883 with the words Class can no longer stand apart from class I claim for music that it produces that union of feeling which I much desire to promote 44 At the same time he enjoyed gambling and country sports and was an enthusiastic hunter He ordered all the clocks at Sandringham to run half an hour ahead to provide more daylight time for shooting This so called tradition of Sandringham Time continued until 1936 when it was abolished by Edward VIII 55 He also laid out a golf course at Windsor By the 1870s the future king had taken a keen interest in horseracing and steeplechasing In 1896 his horse Persimmon won both the Derby Stakes and the St Leger Stakes In 1900 Persimmon s brother Diamond Jubilee won five races Derby St Leger 2 000 Guineas Stakes Newmarket Stakes and Eclipse Stakes 56 and another of Edward s horses Ambush II won the Grand National 57 Edward right with his mother centre and Russian relations Tsar Nicholas II left Empress Alexandra and baby Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna 1896 In 1891 Edward was embroiled in the royal baccarat scandal when it was revealed he had played an illegal card game for money the previous year The Prince was forced to appear as a witness in court for a second time when one of the participants unsuccessfully sued his fellow players for slander after being accused of cheating 58 In the same year Edward was involved in a personal conflict when Lord Charles Beresford threatened to reveal details of Edward s private life to the press as a protest against Edward interfering with Beresford s affair with Daisy Greville Countess of Warwick The friendship between the two men was irreversibly damaged and their bitterness would last for the remainder of their lives 59 Usually Edward s outbursts of temper were short lived and after he had let himself go he would smooth matters by being especially nice 60 In late 1891 Edward s eldest son Albert Victor was engaged to Princess Victoria Mary of Teck Just a few weeks later in early 1892 Albert Victor died of pneumonia Edward was grief stricken To lose our eldest son he wrote is one of those calamities one can never really get over Edward told Queen Victoria I would have given my life for him as I put no value on mine 61 Albert Victor was the second of Edward s children to die In 1871 his youngest son Alexander John had died just 24 hours after being born Edward had insisted on placing Alexander John in a coffin personally with the tears rolling down his cheeks 62 On his way to Denmark through Belgium on 4 April 1900 Edward was the victim of an attempted assassination when fifteen year old Jean Baptiste Sipido shot at him in protest over the Second Boer War Sipido though obviously guilty was acquitted by a Belgian court because he was underage 63 The perceived laxity of the Belgian authorities combined with British disgust at Belgian atrocities in the Congo worsened the already poor relations between the United Kingdom and the Continent However in the next ten years Edward s affability and popularity as well as his use of family connections assisted Britain in building European alliances 64 Reign EditAccession Edit Portrait by Sir Luke Fildes 1901 When Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901 Edward became King of the United Kingdom Emperor of India and in an innovation King of the British Dominions 65 He chose to reign under the name of Edward VII instead of Albert Edward the name his mother had intended for him to use d declaring that he did not wish to undervalue the name of Albert and diminish the status of his father with whom the name should stand alone 66 The numeral VII was occasionally omitted in Scotland even by the national church in deference to protests that the previous Edwards were English kings who had been excluded from Scotland by battle 11 J B Priestley recalled I was only a child when he succeeded Victoria in 1901 but I can testify to his extraordinary popularity He was in fact the most popular king England had known since the earlier 1660s 67 Caricature in Puck magazine 1901 Edward donated his parents house Osborne on the Isle of Wight to the state and continued to live at Sandringham 68 He could afford to be magnanimous his private secretary Sir Francis Knollys claimed that he was the first heir to succeed to the throne in credit 69 Edward s finances had been ably managed by Sir Dighton Probyn Comptroller of the Household and had benefited from advice from Edward s financier friends some of whom were Jewish such as Ernest Cassel Maurice de Hirsch and the Rothschild family 70 At a time of widespread anti Semitism Edward attracted criticism for openly socialising with Jews 71 72 Edward s coronation had originally been scheduled for 26 June 1902 However two days before he was diagnosed with appendicitis 73 The disease was generally not treated operatively It carried a high mortality rate but developments in anaesthesia and antisepsis in the preceding 50 years made life saving surgery possible 74 Sir Frederick Treves with the support of Lord Lister performed a then radical operation of draining a pint of pus from the infected abscess through a small incision through 4 1 2 inch thickness of belly fat and abdomen wall this outcome showed that the cause was not cancer 75 The next day Edward was sitting up in bed smoking a cigar 76 Two weeks later it was announced that he was out of danger Treves was honoured with a baronetcy which the King had arranged before the operation 77 and appendix surgery entered the medical mainstream 74 Edward was crowned at Westminster Abbey on 9 August 1902 by the 80 year old Archbishop of Canterbury Frederick Temple who died only four months later 73 Edward refurbished the royal palaces reintroduced the traditional ceremonies such as the State Opening of Parliament that his mother had foregone and founded new honours such as the Order of Merit to recognise contributions to the arts and sciences 78 In 1902 the Shah of Persia Mozzafar al Din visited England expecting to receive the Order of the Garter The King refused to bestow the honour on the Shah because the order was meant to be in his personal gift and the Foreign Secretary Lord Lansdowne had promised it without his consent He also objected to inducting a Muslim into a Christian order of chivalry His refusal threatened to damage British attempts to gain influence in Persia 79 but Edward resented his ministers attempts to reduce his traditional powers 80 Eventually he relented and Britain sent a special embassy to the Shah with a full Order of the Garter the following year 81 Uncle of Europe Edit Edward VII relaxing at Balmoral Castle photographed by his wife Alexandra As king Edward s main interests lay in the fields of foreign affairs and naval and military matters Fluent in French and German he reinvented royal diplomacy by numerous state visits across Europe 82 He took annual holidays in Biarritz and Marienbad 55 One of his most important foreign trips was an official visit to France in May 1903 as the guest of President Emile Loubet Following a visit to Pope Leo XIII in Rome this trip helped create the atmosphere for the Anglo French Entente Cordiale an agreement delineating British and French colonies in North Africa and ruling out any future war between the two countries The Entente was negotiated in 1904 between the French foreign minister Theophile Delcasse and the British foreign secretary Lord Lansdowne It marked the end of centuries of Anglo French rivalry and Britain s splendid isolation from Continental affairs and attempted to counterbalance the growing dominance of the German Empire and its ally Austria Hungary 83 Edward was related to nearly every other European monarch and came to be known as the uncle of Europe 37 German Emperor Wilhelm II and Emperor Nicholas II of Russia were his nephews Queen Victoria Eugenia of Spain Crown Princess Margaret of Sweden Crown Princess Marie of Romania Crown Princess Sophia of Greece and Empress Alexandra of Russia were his nieces King Haakon VII of Norway was both his nephew and his son in law kings Frederick VIII of Denmark and George I of Greece were his brothers in law kings Albert I of Belgium Ferdinand of Bulgaria and Charles I and Manuel II of Portugal were his second cousins Edward doted on his grandchildren and indulged them to the consternation of their governesses 84 However there was one relation whom Edward did not like Wilhelm II His difficult relationship with his nephew exacerbated the tensions between Germany and Britain 85 In April 1908 during Edward s annual stay at Biarritz he accepted the resignation of British Prime Minister Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman In a break with precedent Edward asked Campbell Bannerman s successor H H Asquith to travel to Biarritz to kiss hands Asquith complied but the press criticised the action of the King in appointing a prime minister on foreign soil instead of returning to Britain 86 In June 1908 Edward became the first reigning British monarch to visit the Russian Empire despite refusing to visit in 1906 when Anglo Russian relations were strained in the aftermath of the Russo Japanese War the Dogger Bank incident and the Tsar s dissolution of the Duma 87 The previous month he visited the Scandinavian countries becoming the first British monarch to visit Sweden 88 Political opinions Edit Edward depicted in naval uniform by Vanity Fair magazine 1902 While Prince of Wales Edward had to be dissuaded from breaking with constitutional precedent by openly voting for W E Gladstone s Representation of the People Bill 1884 in the House of Lords 11 89 On other matters he was more conservative for example he did not favour giving votes to women 11 90 although he did suggest that the social reformer Octavia Hill serve on the Commission for Working Class Housing 91 He was also opposed to Irish Home Rule instead preferring a form of dual monarchy 11 As Prince of Wales Edward had come to enjoy warm and mutually respectful relations with Gladstone whom his mother detested 92 But the statesman s son Home Secretary Herbert Gladstone angered the King by planning to permit Roman Catholic priests in vestments to carry the Host through the streets of London and by appointing two ladies Lady Frances Balfour and May Tennant wife of H J Tennant to serve on a Royal Commission on reforming divorce law Edward thought divorce could not be discussed with delicacy or even decency before ladies Edward s biographer Philip Magnus Allcroft suggests that Gladstone may have become a whipping boy for the King s general irritation with the Liberal government Gladstone was sacked in the reshuffle the following year and the King agreed with some reluctance to appoint him Governor General of South Africa 93 Edward involved himself heavily in discussions over army reform the need for which had become apparent with the failings of the Second Boer War 94 He supported the redesign of army command the creation of the Territorial Force and the decision to provide an Expeditionary Force supporting France in the event of war with Germany 95 Reform of the Royal Navy was also suggested partly due to the ever increasing Naval Estimates and because of the emergence of the Imperial German Navy as a new strategic threat 96 Ultimately a dispute arose between Admiral Lord Charles Beresford who favoured increased spending and a broad deployment and the First Sea Lord Admiral Sir John Fisher who favoured efficiency savings scrapping obsolete vessels and a strategic realignment of the Royal Navy relying on torpedo craft for home defence backed by the new dreadnoughts 97 98 The King lent support to Fisher in part because he disliked Beresford and eventually Beresford was dismissed Beresford continued his campaign outside of the navy and Fisher ultimately announced his resignation in late 1909 although the bulk of his policies were retained 99 The King was intimately involved in the appointment of Fisher s successor as the Fisher Beresford feud had split the service and the only truly qualified figure known to be outside of both camps was Sir Arthur Wilson who had retired in 1907 100 Wilson was reluctant to return to active duty but Edward persuaded him to do so and Wilson became First Sea Lord on 25 January 1910 101 Edward was rarely interested in politics although his views on some issues were notably progressive for the time During his reign he said use of the word nigger was disgraceful despite it then being in common parlance 102 In 1904 during an Anglo German summit in Kiel between Wilhelm II and Edward Wilhelm with the Russo Japanese War in mind started to go on about the Yellow Peril which he called the greatest peril menacing Christendom and European civilisation If the Russians went on giving ground the yellow race would in twenty years time be in Moscow and Posen 103 Wilhelm went on to attack his British guests for supporting Japan against Russia suggesting that the British were committing race treason In response Edward stated that he could not see it The Japanese were an intelligent brave and chivalrous nation quite as civilised as the Europeans from whom they only differed by the pigmentation of their skin 103 Although Edward lived a life of luxury often far removed from that of the majority of his subjects they expected it and his personal charm with all levels of society and his strong condemnation of prejudice went some way to assuage republican and racial tensions building during his lifetime 11 Constitutional crisis Edit Bust by Francis Derwent Wood Profile of Edward VII on a halfpenny 1902 In the last year of his life Edward became embroiled in a constitutional crisis when the Conservative majority in the House of Lords refused to pass the People s Budget proposed by the Liberal government of Prime Minister Asquith The crisis eventually led after Edward s death to the removal of the Lords right to veto legislation The King was displeased at Liberal attacks on the peers which included a polemical speech by David Lloyd George at Limehouse 104 Cabinet minister Winston Churchill publicly demanded a general election for which Asquith apologised to the King s adviser Lord Knollys and rebuked Churchill at a Cabinet meeting Edward was so dispirited at the tone of class warfare although Asquith told him that party rancour had been just as bad over the First Home Rule Bill in 1886 that he introduced his son to Secretary of State for War Richard Haldane as the last King of England 105 After the King s horse Minoru won the Derby on 26 July 1909 he returned to the racetrack the following day and laughed when a man shouted Now King You ve won the Derby Go back home and dissolve this bloody Parliament 106 In vain the King urged Conservative leaders Arthur Balfour and Lord Lansdowne to pass the Budget which Lord Esher had advised him was not unusual as Queen Victoria had helped to broker agreements between the two Houses over Irish disestablishment in 1869 and the Third Reform Act in 1884 107 On Asquith s advice however he did not offer them an election at which to judge from recent by elections they were likely to gain seats as a reward for doing so 108 The Finance Bill passed the Commons on 5 November 1909 but was rejected by the Lords on 30 November they instead passed a resolution of Lord Lansdowne s stating that they were entitled to oppose the bill as it lacked an electoral mandate The King was annoyed that his efforts to urge passage of the budget had become public knowledge 109 and had forbidden Knollys who was an active Liberal peer from voting for the budget although Knollys had suggested that this would be a suitable gesture to indicate royal desire to see the Budget pass 110 In December 1909 a proposal to create peers to give the Liberals a majority in the Lords or give the prime minister the right to do so was considered outrageous by Knollys who thought the King should abdicate rather than agree to it 111 The January 1910 election was dominated by talk of removing the Lords veto During the election campaign Lloyd George talked of guarantees and Asquith of safeguards that would be necessary before forming another Liberal government but the King informed Asquith that he would not be willing to contemplate creating peers until after a second general election 11 112 Balfour refused to be drawn on whether or not he would be willing to form a Conservative government but advised the King not to promise to create peers until he had seen the terms of any proposed constitutional change 113 During the campaign the leading Conservative Walter Long had asked Knollys for permission to state that the King did not favour Irish Home Rule but Knollys refused on the grounds that it was not appropriate for the monarch s views to be known in public 114 The election resulted in a hung parliament with the Liberal government dependent on the support of the third largest party the nationalist Irish Parliamentary Party The King suggested a compromise whereby only 50 peers from each side would be allowed to vote which would also obviate the large Conservative majority in the Lords but Lord Crewe Liberal leader in the Lords advised that this would reduce the Lords independence as only peers who were loyal party supporters would be picked 114 Pressure to remove the Lords veto now came from the Irish nationalist MPs who wanted to remove the Lords ability to block the introduction of Home Rule They threatened to vote against the Budget unless they had their way an attempt by Lloyd George to win their support by amending whiskey duties was abandoned as the Cabinet felt this would recast the Budget too much Asquith now revealed that there were no guarantees for the creation of peers The Cabinet considered resigning and leaving it up to Balfour to try to form a Conservative government 115 The King s Speech from the Throne on 21 February made reference to introducing measures restricting the Lords power of veto to one of delay but Asquith inserted a phrase in the opinion of my advisers so the King could be seen to be distancing himself from the planned legislation 116 The Commons passed resolutions on 14 April that would form the basis for the 1911 Parliament Act to remove the power of the Lords to veto money bills to replace their veto of other bills with a power to delay and to reduce the term of Parliament from seven years to five the King would have preferred four 113 But in that debate Asquith hinted to ensure the support of the nationalist MPs that he would ask the King to break the deadlock in that Parliament i e contrary to Edward s earlier stipulation that there be a second election The Budget was passed by both Commons and Lords in April 117 By April the Palace was having secret talks with Balfour and Randall Davidson Archbishop of Canterbury who both advised that the Liberals did not have sufficient mandate to demand the creation of peers The King thought the whole proposal simply disgusting and that the government was in the hands of Redmond amp Co Lord Crewe announced publicly that the government s wish to create peers should be treated as formal ministerial advice which by convention the monarch must accept although Lord Esher argued that the monarch was entitled in extremis to dismiss the government rather than take their advice 118 Esher s view has been called obsolete and unhelpful 119 Death EditMain article Death and state funeral of Edward VII The body of the King in his deathbed May 1910 source source source source source source Funeral procession of Edward VII London 1910 Edward habitually smoked twenty cigarettes and twelve cigars a day In 1907 a rodent ulcer a type of cancer affecting the skin next to his nose was cured with radium 120 Towards the end of his life he increasingly suffered from bronchitis 11 He suffered a momentary loss of consciousness during a state visit to Berlin in February 1909 121 In March 1910 he was staying at Biarritz when he collapsed He remained there to convalesce while in London Asquith tried to get the Finance Bill passed The King s continued ill health was unreported and he attracted criticism for staying in France while political tensions were so high 11 On 27 April he returned to Buckingham Palace still suffering from severe bronchitis Alexandra returned from visiting her brother George I of Greece in Corfu a week later on 5 May On 6 May Edward suffered several heart attacks but refused to go to bed saying No I shall not give in I shall go on I shall work to the end 122 Between moments of faintness his son the Prince of Wales shortly to be King George V told him that his horse Witch of the Air had won at Kempton Park that afternoon The King replied Yes I have heard of it I am very glad his final words 11 At 11 30 p m he lost consciousness for the last time and was put to bed He died 15 minutes later 122 Alexandra refused to allow Edward s body to be moved for eight days afterwards though she allowed small groups of visitors to enter his room 123 On 11 May the late king was dressed in his uniform and placed in a massive oak coffin which was moved on 14 May to the throne room where it was sealed and lay in state with a guardsman standing at each corner of the bier Despite the time that had elapsed since his death Alexandra noted the King s body remained wonderfully preserved 124 On the morning of 17 May the coffin was placed on a gun carriage and drawn by black horses to Westminster Hall with the new king his family and Edward s favourite dog Caesar walking behind Following a brief service the royal family left and the hall was opened to the public over 400 000 people filed past the coffin over the next two days 125 As Barbara Tuchman noted in The Guns of August his funeral held on 20 May 1910 marked the greatest assemblage of royalty and rank ever gathered in one place and of its kind the last A royal train conveyed the King s coffin from London to Windsor Castle where Edward was buried at St George s Chapel 126 Legacy EditFurther information Cultural depictions of Edward VII and Royal eponyms in Canada Statue in Queen Victoria Gardens Melbourne Statue outside Holyrood Palace Edinburgh Statue of Edward VII Bangalore IndiaStatues of Edward can be found throughout the former empire Before his accession to the throne Edward was the longest serving heir apparent in British history He was surpassed by his great great grandson Charles III on 20 April 2011 127 The title Prince of Wales is not automatically held by the heir apparent it is bestowed by the reigning monarch at a time of his or her choosing 128 Edward was the longest serving holder of that title until surpassed by Charles on 9 September 2017 129 Edward was Prince of Wales between 8 December 1841 and 22 January 1901 59 years 45 days Charles held the title between 26 July 1958 and 8 September 2022 64 years 44 days 128 130 131 As king Edward VII proved a greater success than anyone had expected 132 but he was already past the average life expectancy and had little time left to fulfil the role In his short reign he ensured that his second son and heir George V was better prepared to take the throne Contemporaries described their relationship as more like affectionate brothers than father and son 133 and on Edward s death George wrote in his diary that he had lost his best friend and the best of fathers I never had a cross word with him in my life I am heart broken and overwhelmed with grief 134 Edward has been recognised as the first truly constitutional British sovereign and the last sovereign to wield effective political power 135 Though lauded as Peacemaker 136 he had been afraid that German Emperor Wilhelm II who was one of his nephews would tip Europe into war 137 Four years after Edward s death the First World War broke out The naval reforms he had supported and his part in securing the Triple Entente between Britain France and Russia as well as his relationships with his extended family fed the paranoia of the German Emperor who blamed Edward for the war 138 Publication of the official biography of Edward was delayed until 1927 by its author Sidney Lee who feared German propagandists would select material to portray Edward as an anti German warmonger 139 Lee was also hampered by the extensive destruction of Edward s personal papers Edward had left orders that all his letters should be burned on his death 140 Subsequent biographers have been able to construct a more rounded picture of Edward by using material and sources that were unavailable to Lee 141 Historian R C K Ensor writing in 1936 praised the King s political personality he had in many respects great natural ability He knew how to be both dignified and charming he had an excellent memory and his tact in handling people was quite exceptional He had a store of varied though unsystematized knowledge gathered at first hand through talking to all sorts of eminent men His tastes were not particularly elevated but they were thoroughly English and he showed much though not unfailing comprehension for the common instincts of the people over whom he reigned This was not the less remarkable because though a good linguist in French and German he never learned to speak English without a German accent 142 Ensor rejects the widespread notion that the King exerted an important influence on British foreign policy believing he gained that reputation by making frequent trips abroad with many highly publicized visits to foreign courts Ensor thought surviving documents showed how comparatively crude his views on foreign policy were how little he read and of what naive indiscretions he was capable 143 Edward received criticism for his apparent pursuit of self indulgent pleasure but he received great praise for his affable manners and diplomatic tact As his grandson Edward VIII wrote his lighter side obscured the fact that he had both insight and influence 144 He had a tremendous zest for pleasure but he also had a real sense of duty wrote J B Priestley 145 Lord Esher wrote that Edward VII was kind and debonair and not undignified but too human 146 Honours EditBritish honours 5 KG Royal Knight of the Garter 9 November 1858 147 GCSI Extra Knight Companion of the Star of India 25 June 1861 148 Extra Knight Grand Commander 24 May 1866 149 FRS Fellow of the Royal Society 12 February 1863 PC Member of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom 8 December 1863 GCB Knight Grand Cross of the Bath military 10 February 1865 150 Great Master 22 June 1897 151 KT Extra Knight of the Thistle 24 May 1867 152 KP Extra Knight of St Patrick 18 March 1868 153 PC I Member of the Privy Council of Ireland 21 April 1868 GCStJ Knight of Justice of St John 1876 154 Grand Prior 1888 155 GCMG Extra Knight Grand Cross of St Michael and St George 31 May 1877 156 GCIE Extra Knight Grand Commander of the Indian Empire 21 June 1887 157 GCVO Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order 6 May 1896 158 Albert Medal of the Royal Society of Arts 1901 159 Founder and Sovereign of the Order of Merit 26 June 1902 160 Founder and Sovereign of the Imperial Service Order 8 August 1902 161 Founder of the Royal Victorian Chain 1902 162 Foreign honours Armorial achievement of the Spanish Army 62nd Regiment of Infantry Arapiles King Edward s cypher and the name of the British Army unit that played a prominent role in the Battle of Salamanca were added at the beginning of the Peninsular War Centenary 1908 163 Saxony Knight of the Rue Crown 1844 164 Russia 165 Knight of St Andrew with Collar 1844 Knight of St Alexander Nevsky 1844 Knight of the White Eagle 1844 Knight of St Anna 1st Class 1844 Knight of St Stanislaus 1st Class 1844 Knight of St Vladimir 3rd Class 1881 Netherlands Grand Cross of the Netherlands Lion 1849 165 Spain Knight of the Golden Fleece 7 May 1852 166 Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III with Collar 6 May 1876 167 Portugal 168 Grand Cross of the Tower and Sword 25 November 1858 Grand Cross of the Sash of the Two Orders 7 June 1865 Three Orders 8 February 1901 Prussia 169 Knight of the Black Eagle 22 December 1858 with Collar 1869 Grand Cross of the Red Eagle 2 March 1874 Grand Commander s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern 11 March 1878 Knight of the Royal Crown Order 3rd Class with Red Cross on White Field on Commemorative Band 4 April 1881 Knight of Honour of the Johanniter Order 19 May 1884 Belgium Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold civil 11 January 1859 170 Sardinia Knight of the Annunciation 20 February 1859 171 Ernestine duchies Grand Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order December 1859 172 Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the White Falcon 17 April 1860 173 Baden 174 Knight of the House Order of Fidelity 1861 Grand Cross of the Zahringer Lion 1861 Ottoman Empire Order of Osmanieh 1st Class 25 May 1862 175 Hanedan i Ali Osman June 1902 176 Greece Grand Cross of the Redeemer 29 May 1862 177 Hesse and by Rhine 178 Grand Cross of the Ludwig Order 8 October 1862 Grand Cross of the Merit Order of Philip the Magnanimous with Swords 18 February 1878 Knight of the Golden Lion 18 June 1882 France Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 15 March 1863 179 Denmark 180 Knight of the Elephant 16 November 1863 Cross of Honour of the Order of the Dannebrog 14 October 1864 Commemorative Medal for the Golden Wedding of King Christian IX and Queen Louise 1892 Grand Commander of the Dannebrog 9 September 1901 Sweden Knight of the Seraphim with Collar 27 September 1864 181 Knight of the Order of Charles XIII 21 December 1868 182 Commander Grand Cross of the Order of Vasa with Collar 26 April 1908 183 Hanover 184 Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order 1864 Knight of St George 1865 Mecklenburg Grand Cross of the Wendish Crown with Crown in Ore 13 August 1865 185 Nassau Knight of the Gold Lion of Nassau August 1865 186 Austria Hungary Grand Cross of the Royal Hungarian Order of St Stephen 13 June 1867 187 Brazil Grand Cross of the Southern Cross 11 July 1871 187 Ethiopia Grand Cross of the Seal of Solomon 1874 188 Grand Cross of the Star of Ethiopia 9 October 1901 189 Norway Grand Cross of St Olav with Collar 3 October 1874 190 Oldenburg Grand Cross of the Order of Duke Peter Friedrich Ludwig with Golden Crown 24 February 1878 191 Siam Knight of the Order of the Royal House of Chakri 1880 165 Grand Cross of the White Elephant 1887 187 Military Order of Malta Knight 14 June 1881 187 Bailiff Grand Cross of Honour and Devotion 192 Hawaii Grand Cross of the Order of Kalakaua with Collar July 1881 193 Romania Grand Cross of the Star of Romania 1882 165 Collar of the Order of Carol I 1906 194 Wurttemberg Grand Cross of the Wurttemberg Crown 1883 195 Japan Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum 20 September 1886 Collar 13 April 1902 196 Bavaria Knight of St Hubert 19 March 1901 187 Monaco Grand Cross of St Charles 25 June 1902 197 San Marino Grand Cross of the Order of San Marino August 1902 198 Montenegro Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Danilo I 1902 199 Persia Order of the Aqdas 1st Class 1904 200 Honorary foreign military appointments Edit 1870 Honorary Colonel of the Guard Hussar Regiment Denmark 201 1883 Field Marshal Generalfeldmarschall of the German Army 202 5 February 1901 Honorary Colonel of the 27th King Edward s Regiment of Dragoons of Kiev 203 26 June 1902 Admiral of the Fleet Grossadmiral a la suite of the Imperial German Navy 202 Honorary Captain General of the Spanish Army 204 Honorary Admiral of the Spanish Navy 204 Colonel in Chief of the German regiment 5th Pomeranian Hussars Prince Blucher of Wahlstatt 202 Colonel in Chief 1st Guards Dragoons Queen of Great Britain and Ireland 202 Honorary Colonel of the Infantry Regiment Zamora No 8 Spain 204 1905 Honorary Admiral of the Swedish Navy 205 1908 Honorary General of the Swedish Army 206 Honorary Admiral of the Greek Navy 192 Honorary General of the Norwegian Army 192 Arms Edit Shortly after Edward s accession he proposed an alternate version of the Royal Standard for use by the Sovereign defaced in the centre with a purple oval containing the cypher and crown of the reigning monarch However he was persuaded that such a proposal was impractical 207 Edward s coat of arms as the Prince of Wales was the royal arms differenced by a label of three points argent and an inescutcheon of the Duchy of Saxony representing his paternal arms When he acceded as King he gained the royal arms undifferenced 208 Coat of arms as Prince of Wales 1841 1901 Royal coat of arms outside Scotland Royal coat of arms in Scotland Royal cypherIssue EditName Birth Death Marriage notesPrince Albert Victor Duke of Clarence and Avondale 8 January 1864 14 January 1892 aged 28 engaged 1891 to Princess Victoria Mary of TeckGeorge V 3 June 1865 20 January 1936 aged 70 1893 Princess Victoria Mary of Teck had issue including Edward VIII and George VILouise Princess Royal 20 February 1867 4 January 1931 aged 63 1889 Alexander Duff 1st Duke of Fife had issuePrincess Victoria 6 July 1868 3 December 1935 aged 67 never married and without issuePrincess Maud 26 November 1869 20 November 1938 aged 68 1896 Prince Carl of Denmark King of Norway as Haakon VII from 1905 had issue including Prince Alexander later Olav V Prince Alexander John of Wales 6 April 1871 7 April 1871 born and died at Sandringham HouseAncestry EditAncestors of Edward VII 209 210 211 8 Francis Duke of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld 14 4 Ernest I Duke of Saxe Coburg and Gotha9 Countess Augusta Reuss of Ebersdorf 15 2 Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha10 Augustus Duke of Saxe Gotha Altenburg5 Princess Louise of Saxe Gotha Altenburg11 Duchess Louise Charlotte of Mecklenburg Schwerin1 Edward VII of the United Kingdom12 George III of the United Kingdom6 Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn13 Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg Strelitz3 Victoria Queen of the United Kingdom14 Francis Duke of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld 8 7 Princess Victoria of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld15 Countess Augusta Reuss of Ebersdorf 9 See also EditHousehold of Edward VII and Alexandra Edward the Seventh a 1975 television miniseries Notes Edit His godparents were the King of Prussia his paternal step grandmother the Duchess of Saxe Coburg and Gotha for whom the Duchess of Kent his maternal grandmother stood proxy his great uncle the Duke of Cambridge his step great grandmother the Dowager Duchess of Saxe Coburg Altenburg for whom the Duchess of Cambridge his great aunt stood proxy his great aunt Princess Sophia for whom Princess Augusta of Cambridge his first cousin once removed stood proxy and his great uncle Prince Ferdinand of Saxe Coburg and Gotha 2 Gazetted on 10 September 1849 6 Letters written by Edward to Lady Randolph may have signified no more than a flirtation but were w ritten in a strain of undue familiarity 28 No English or British sovereign has ever reigned under a double name References Edit Magnus p 1 No 20065 The London Gazette 28 January 1842 p 224 Bentley Cranch p 1 a b Weir Alison 1996 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Revised Edition London Random House p 319 ISBN 978 0 7126 7448 5 a b Cokayne G E 1910 Gibbs Vicary ed The complete peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom vol 4 London St Catherine s Press pp 451 452 No 21018 The London Gazette 11 September 1849 p 2783 Van der Kiste John September 2004 online edition May 2007 Alfred Prince duke of Edinburgh 1844 1900 Archived 19 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Oxford 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The Times Issue 36866 p 7 The Order of Sovereign Prince Danilo I orderofdanilo org Archived 9 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine Mulder C P 1990 Persian Orders 1808 1925 Copenhagen Orders and Medals Society of Denmark p 14 ISBN 87 88513 08 4 Galla Uniform in Danish archived from the original on 4 June 2016 retrieved 30 January 2016 a b c d The German Emperor and the King 28 June 1902 The Times Issue 36806 p 5 The Coronation 3 June 1902 The Times Issue 36784 p 10 a b c Muerte del Rey Eduardo VII Archived 31 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine 7 May 1910 ABC 1st ed p 12 retrieved 28 April 2016 Svensk rikskalender in Swedish 1908 p 229 archived from the original on 9 July 2019 retrieved 20 February 2019 via runeberg org Svensk rikskalender in Swedish 1909 p 155 archived from the original on 24 December 2019 retrieved 20 February 2019 via runeberg org David Prothero 12 April 2007 British Royal Flags Reign of Edward VII Proposal for a Personal Royal Standard of King Edward VII Flags of the World Retrieved 3 October 2022 Velde Francois 19 April 2008 Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family Heraldica archived from the original on 17 March 2018 retrieved 2 May 2010 Montgomery Massingberd Hugh ed 1977 Burke s Royal Families of the World 1st edition London Burke s Peerage Huberty M Giraud A Magdelaine F amp B 1976 1994 L Allemagne Dynastique Vols I VII Le Perreux France Alain Giraud Louda Jiri Maclagan Michael 1999 Lines of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe London Little Brown p 34 ISBN 978 1 85605 469 0 Bibliography Edit Bentley Cranch Dana 1992 Edward VII Image of an Era 1841 1910 London Her Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 11 290508 0 Ensor R C K 1936 England 1870 1914 Oxford Clarendon Press Hattersley Roy 2004 The Edwardians London Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 72537 8 Heffer Simon 1998 Power and Place The Political Consequences of King Edward VII London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84220 0 Hough Richard 1992 Edward amp Alexandra Their Private and Public Lives London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 0 340 55825 6 Lee Sidney 1927 King Edward VII A Biography vol II London Macmillan Magnus Philip 1964 King Edward The Seventh London John Murray Middlemas Keith 1972 Antonia Fraser ed The Life and Times of Edward VII London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 83189 1 Priestley J B 1970 The Edwardians London Heinemann ISBN 978 0 434 60332 9 Ridley Jane 2012 Bertie A Life of Edward VII London Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 7011 7614 3 Shaw William Arthur Burtchaell George Dames 1906 The knights of England a complete record from the earliest time to the present day of the knights of all the orders of chivalry in England Scotland and Ireland and of knights bachelors London Central chancery of the orders of knighthood Sherratt and Hughes Windsor HRH The Duke of 1951 A King s Story London Cassell and CoFurther reading EditAndrews Allen 1975 The Follies of King Edward VII Lexington ISBN 978 0 904312 15 7 Aubyn Giles St 1979 Edward VII Prince and King Atheneum ISBN 978 0 689 10937 9 Beer Peter 2016 Playboy Princes The Apprentice Years of Edward VII and VIII Peter Owen Buckner Phillip 2003 Casting daylight upon magic Deconstructing the royal tour of 1901 to Canada Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 31 2 158 189 doi 10 1080 03086530310001705656 S2CID 162347515 Butler David 1975 Edward VII Prince of Hearts Littlehampton Book Services Ltd ISBN 978 0 297 76897 5 Cornwallis Kinahan 2009 1860 Royalty in the New World Or the Prince of Wales in America Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 00298 1 Cowles Virginia 1956 Edward VII and his Circle H Hamilton Farrer James Anson 1912 England Under Edward VII Allen amp Unwin Glencross Matthew 2016 The State Visits of Edward VII Reinventing Royal Diplomacy for the Twentieth Century Palgrave Macmillan Hibbert Christopher 2007 Edward VII The Last Victorian King Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 8377 0 Neilson Francis 1957 Edward VII and the Entente Cordiale I American Journal of Economics and Sociology 16 4 353 368 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1957 tb00197 x JSTOR 3484884 Plumptre George 1997 Edward VII Trafalgar Square Publishing ISBN 978 1 85793 846 3 Ponsonby Frederick 1951 Recollections of Three Reigns London Eyre amp Spottiswoode Ridley Jane 2013 The Sport of Kings Shooting and The Court of Edward VII The Court Historian 18 2 189 205 doi 10 1179 cou 2013 18 2 004 S2CID 159750104 Ridley Jane 2016 Bertie Prince of Wales Prince Hal and the Widow of Windsor Royal Heirs and the Uses of Soft Power in Nineteenth Century Europe London Palgrave Macmillan pp 123 138 Roby Kinley E 1975 The King the Press and the People A Study of Edward VII Barrie and Jenkins ISBN 978 0 214 20098 4 Ryan A P 1953 The Diplomacy of Edward VII History Today vol 3 no 5 pp 352 360 Tuchman Barbara 1964 The Guns of August New York Macmillan Walker Richard 1988 The Savile Row Story An Illustrated History London Prion ISBN 978 1 85375 000 7 Watson Alfred Edward Thomas 1911 King Edward VII as a sportsman Longmans Green and Company Weintraub Stanley 2001 Edward the Caresser The Playboy Prince Who Became Edward VII Free Press ISBN 978 0 684 85318 5External links EditListen to this article 47 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 14 July 2014 2014 07 14 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Edward VII at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Works by Edward VII at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Edward VII at Internet Archive Macaulay James editor 1889 Speeches and addresses of H R H the Prince of Wales 1863 1888 London Murray Portraits of King Edward VII at the National Portrait Gallery London Edward VIIHouse of Saxe Coburg and GothaCadet branch of the House of WettinBorn 9 November 1841 Died 6 May 1910Regnal titlesPreceded byVictoria King of the United Kingdom and the British DominionsEmperor of India22 January 1901 6 May 1910 Succeeded byGeorge VBritish royaltyVacantTitle last held byGeorge IV Prince of WalesDuke of CornwallDuke of Rothesay1841 1901 Succeeded byGeorge V Military officesPreceded byThe Earl Beauchamp Colonel of the 10th Prince of Wales s Own Royal Hussars1863 1901 Succeeded byLord Ralph Drury KerrMasonic officesPreceded byThe Marquess of Ripon Grand Master of the UnitedGrand Lodge of England1874 1901 Succeeded byThe Duke of Connaught and StrathearnHonorary titlesVacantTitle last held byAlbert Prince Consort Great Master of the Bath1897 1901 Succeeded byThe Duke of Connaught and Strathearn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward VII amp oldid 1131805718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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