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Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine

Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine, then Princess Louis of Battenberg, later Victoria Mountbatten, Marchioness of Milford Haven (5 April 1863 – 24 September 1950), was the eldest daughter of Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine, and Princess Alice of the United Kingdom, daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine
Marchioness of Milford Haven
Portrait by Alexander Bassano, c. 1878
BornPrincess Victoria Alberta Elisabeth Mathilde Marie of Hesse and by Rhine
(1863-04-05)5 April 1863
Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England
Died24 September 1950(1950-09-24) (aged 87)
Kensington Palace, London, England
Burial28 September 1950
Spouse
(m. 1884; died 1921)
Issue
HouseHesse-Darmstadt
FatherLouis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine
MotherPrincess Alice of the United Kingdom

Born in Windsor Castle in the presence of her maternal grandmother, Princess Victoria was raised in Germany and England. Her mother died while Victoria's brother and sisters were still young, which placed her in an early position of responsibility over her siblings. Over her father's disapproval, she married his morganatic first cousin Prince Louis of Battenberg, an officer in the United Kingdom's Royal Navy, and lived most of her married life in various parts of Europe at her husband's naval posts and visiting her many royal relations. She was perceived by her family as liberal in outlook, straightforward, practical and bright.

During World War I, she and her husband abandoned their German titles and adopted the surname of Mountbatten, which was an anglicised version of the German "Battenberg". Two of her sisters—Elisabeth and Alix, who had married into the Russian imperial family—were murdered by communist revolutionaries. She was the mother of Queen Louise of Sweden and the British statesman and Royal Navy officer Louis Mountbatten; the maternal grandmother of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, consort of Queen Elizabeth II; and paternal great-grandmother of King Charles III.

Early life edit

 
Four of the Hesse sisters: (left to right) Irene, Victoria, Elisabeth, and Alix, 1885

Victoria was born on Easter Sunday at Windsor Castle in the presence of her maternal grandmother, Queen Victoria. She was christened in the Lutheran faith in the Green Drawing Room at Windsor Castle, in the arms of the Queen on 27 April.[1] Her godparents were Queen Victoria, Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, Louis III, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine (represented by Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine), the Prince of Wales and Prince Heinrich of Hesse and by Rhine.[2]

Her early life was spent at Bessungen, a suburb of Darmstadt, until the family moved to the New Palace in Darmstadt when she was three years old. There, she shared a room with her younger sister, Elisabeth, until adulthood. She was privately educated to a high standard and was, throughout her life, an avid reader.[3]

During the Prussian invasion of Hesse in June 1866, Victoria and Elisabeth were sent to Britain to live with their grandmother until hostilities were ended by the absorption of Hesse-Kassel and parts of Hesse-Darmstadt into Prussia.[4] During the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, military hospitals were set up in the palace grounds at Darmstadt, and she helped in the soup kitchens with her mother. She remembered the intense cold of the winter, and being burned on the arm by hot soup.[5]

In 1872, Victoria's eighteen-month-old brother, Friedrich, was diagnosed with haemophilia. The diagnosis came as a shock to the royal families of Europe; it had been twenty years since Queen Victoria had given birth to her haemophiliac son, Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany, and it was the first indication that the bleeding disorder in the royal family was hereditary.[6] The following year, Friedrich fell from a window onto stone steps and died. It was the first of many tragedies to beset the Hesse family.[7]

 
Photograph by Alexander Bassano, c. 1878

In early November 1878, Victoria contracted diphtheria. Elisabeth was swiftly moved out of their room and was the only member of the family to escape the disease. For days, Victoria's mother, Princess Alice, nursed the sick, but she was unable to save her youngest daughter, Victoria's sister Marie, who died in mid-November. Just as the rest of the family seemed to have recovered, Princess Alice fell ill. She died on 14 December, the anniversary of the death of her father, Prince Albert.[8] As the eldest child, Victoria partly assumed the role of mother to the younger children and of companion to her father.[7] She later wrote, "My mother's death was an irreparable loss ... My childhood ended with her death, for I became the eldest and most responsible".[9]

Marriage and family edit

At family gatherings, Victoria had often met Prince Louis of Battenberg, who was her first cousin once removed and a member of a morganatic branch of the Hessian royal family. Prince Louis had adopted British nationality and was serving as an officer in the Royal Navy. In the winter of 1882, they met again at Darmstadt, and were engaged the following summer.[10]

After a brief postponement because of the death of her maternal uncle Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany,[11] Victoria married Prince Louis on 30 April 1884 at Darmstadt. Her father did not approve of the match; in his view Prince Louis—his own first cousin—had little money and would deprive him of his daughter's company, as the couple would naturally live abroad in Britain. However, Victoria was of an independent mind and took little notice of her father's displeasure.[12] Remarkably, that same evening, Victoria's father secretly married his mistress, Countess Alexandrine von Hutten-Czapska,[13] the former wife of Alexander von Kolemine, the Russian chargé d'affaires in Darmstadt. His marriage to a divorcee who was not of equal rank shocked the assembled royalty of Europe and through diplomatic and family pressure Victoria's father was forced to seek an annulment of his own marriage.[14]

Over the next sixteen years, Victoria and her husband had four children:

Name Birth Death Marriage
Alice 25 February 1885 5 December 1969 Married 1903 Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark
Five children, including the Duke of Edinburgh[15]
Louise 13 July 1889 7 March 1965 Married 1923 King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden (his second marriage)
One stillborn daughter
George 6 November 1892 8 April 1938 Married 1916 Countess Nadejda Mikhailovna de Torby
Two children[16]
Louis 25 June 1900 27 August 1979 Married 1922 Edwina Cynthia Annette Ashley
Two children[17]
 
Victoria (back row, second from right) at the marriage of her brother Ernest Louis (back row, right) to Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (seated, second from right), 1894. Nicholas II of Russia and his fiancé Alix are on the back row left, Irene and Elisabeth are seated front row left, and Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich of Russia (Elisabeth's husband) is seated right.

They lived in a succession of houses at Chichester, Sussex, Walton-on-Thames, and Schloss Heiligenberg, Jugenheim. When Prince Louis was serving with the Mediterranean Fleet, she spent some winters in Malta.[7] In 1887, she contracted typhoid but, after being nursed through her illness by her husband, was sufficiently recovered by June to attend Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee celebrations in London.[18] She was interested in science and drew a detailed geological map of Malta and also participated in archaeological digs both on the island and in Germany.[19] In leather-bound volumes she kept meticulous records of books she had read, which reveal a wide range of interests, including socialist philosophy.[20]

She personally taught her own children and exposed them to new ideas and inventions.[21] She gave lessons to her younger son, Louis, until he was ten years of age. He said of her in 1968 that she was "a walking encyclopedia. All through her life she stored up knowledge on all sorts of subjects, and she had the great gift of being able to make it all interesting when she taught it to me. She was completely methodical; we had time-tables for each subject, and I had to do preparation, and so forth. She taught me to enjoy working hard, and to be thorough. She was outspoken and open-minded to a degree quite unusual in members of the Royal Family. And she was also entirely free from prejudice about politics or colour and things of that kind."[22]

In 1906, she flew in a Zeppelin airship, and even more daringly later flew in a biplane even though it was "not made to carry passengers, and we perched securely attached on a little stool holding on to the flyer's back".[23] Up until 1914, Victoria regularly visited her relatives abroad in both Germany and Russia, including her two sisters who had married into the Russian imperial family: Elisabeth, who had married Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich, and Alix, who had married Emperor Nicholas II. Victoria was one of the Empress's relatives who tried to persuade her away from the influence of Rasputin.[24] On the outbreak of war between Germany and Britain in 1914, Victoria and her daughter, Louise, were in Russia at Yekaterinburg. By train and steamer, they travelled to St Petersburg and from there through Tornio to Stockholm. They sailed from Bergen, Norway, on "the last ship" back to Britain.[25]

Later life edit

 
A 1917 Punch cartoon depicting King George V sweeping away the German titles held by members of his family

Prince Louis was forced to resign from the navy at the start of the war when his German origins became an embarrassment, and the couple retired for the war years to Kent House on the Isle of Wight, which Victoria had been given by her aunt Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll.[26] Victoria blamed her husband's forced resignation on the Government "who few greatly respect or trust".[27] She distrusted the First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, because she thought him unreliable—he had once borrowed a book and failed to return it.[28] Continued public hostility to Germany led King George V of the United Kingdom to renounce his German titles, and at the same time on 14 July 1917 Prince Louis and Victoria renounced theirs, assuming an anglicised version of Battenberg—Mountbatten—as their surname.[29] Four months later Louis was re-ennobled by the King as Marquess of Milford Haven. During the war, Victoria's two sisters, Alix and Elisabeth, were murdered in the Russian revolution, and her brother, Ernest Louis, Grand Duke of Hesse, was deposed. On her last visit to Russia in 1914, Victoria had driven past the very house in Yekaterinburg where Alix would be murdered.[30] In January 1921, after a long and convoluted journey, Elisabeth's body was interred in Jerusalem in Victoria's presence. Alix's body was never recovered during Victoria's lifetime.[31]

 
Victoria in 1932

Victoria's husband died in London in September 1921. After meeting her at the Naval and Military Club in Piccadilly, he complained of feeling unwell and Victoria persuaded him to rest in a room they had booked in the club annexe. She called a doctor, who prescribed some medicine, and Victoria went out to fill the prescription at a nearby pharmacy. When she came back, Louis was dead.[32] On her widowhood, Victoria moved into a grace-and-favour residence at Kensington Palace and, in the words of her biographer, "became a central matriarchal figure in the lives of Europe's surviving royalty".[33] In 1930, her eldest daughter, Alice, suffered a nervous breakdown and was diagnosed as schizophrenic.[34] In the following decade Victoria was largely responsible for her grandson Prince Philip's education and upbringing during his parents' separation and his mother's institutionalisation. Prince Philip recalled, "I liked my grandmother very much and she was always helpful. She was very good with children ... she took the practical approach to them. She treated them in the right way—the right combination of the rational and the emotional."[35]

In 1937, Victoria's brother, Ernest Louis, died and soon afterwards her widowed sister-in-law, nephew, granddaughter and two of her great-grandchildren all died in an air crash at Ostend. Victoria's granddaughter, Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark, had married Victoria's nephew (Ernest Louis's son), George Donatus of Hesse. They and their two young sons, Louis and Alexander, were all killed. Cecilie's youngest child, Johanna, who was not on the plane, was adopted by her uncle Prince Louis of Hesse and by Rhine but the little girl only survived her parents and older brothers by eighteen months, dying in 1939 of meningitis.[36]

Further tragedy soon followed when Victoria's son, George, died of bone cancer the following year. Her granddaughter, Lady Pamela Hicks, remembered her grandmother's tears.[37] In World War II Victoria was bombed out of Kensington Palace, and spent some time at Windsor Castle with King George VI. Her surviving son (Louis) and her two grandsons (David Mountbatten and Prince Philip) served in the Royal Navy, while her German relations fought with the opposing forces. She spent most of her time reading and worrying about her children; her daughter, Alice, remained in occupied Greece and was unable to communicate with her mother for four years at the height of the war.[38] After the Allied victory, her son, Louis, was made Viscount Mountbatten of Burma. He was offered the post of Viceroy of India, but she was deeply opposed to his accepting, knowing that the position would be dangerous and difficult; he accepted anyway.[39]

On 15 December 1948, the Dowager Marchioness attended the christening of her great-grandson, Prince Charles. She was one of eight sponsors or godparents, along with King George VI, King Haakon VII of Norway, Queen Mary, Princess Margaret, Prince George of Greece and Denmark, Lady Brabourne, and David Bowes-Lyon.[40]

She fell ill with bronchitis (she had smoked since the age of sixteen[41]) at Lord Mountbatten's home at Broadlands, Hampshire, in the summer of 1950. Saying "it is better to die at home",[42] Victoria moved back to Kensington Palace, where she died on 24 September aged 87. She was buried four days later in the grounds of St. Mildred's Church, Whippingham on the Isle of Wight.[7]

 
Portrait by Philip de László, 1937

Legacy edit

With the help of her lady-in-waiting, Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden, Victoria wrote a memoir, held in the Mountbatten archive at the University of Southampton, which remains an interesting source for royal historians.[7][43] A selection of Queen Victoria's letters to Victoria have been published with a commentary by Richard Hough and an introduction by Victoria's granddaughter, Patricia Mountbatten.[44]

Lord Mountbatten remembered her fondly: "My mother was very quick on the uptake, very talkative, very aggressive and argumentative. With her marvellous brain she sharpened people's wits."[45] Her granddaughter thought her "formidable, but never intimidating ... a supremely honest woman, full of commonsense and modesty".[46] Victoria wrote her own typically forthright epitaph at the end of her life in letters to and conversation with her son: "What will live in history is the good work done by the individual & that has nothing to do with rank or title ... I never thought I would be known only as your mother. You're so well known now and no one knows about me, and I don't want them to."[47]

Honours edit

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hough, Richard (1984). Louis and Victoria: The Family History of the Mountbattens. Second edition. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 28. ISBN 0-297-78470-6.
  2. ^ Queen Victoria's Journals – Monday 27 April 1863
  3. ^ Hough, p. 30
  4. ^ Hough, p. 29
  5. ^ Hough, p. 34
  6. ^ Hough, p. 36
  7. ^ a b c d e Vickers, Hugo (2004). "Mountbatten, Victoria Alberta Elisabeth Mathilde Marie, marchioness of Milford Haven (1863–1950)". In Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/66334. ISBN 978-0-19-861411-1. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  8. ^ Hough, pp. 46–48
  9. ^ Hough, p. 50
  10. ^ Hough, p. 57
  11. ^ Hough, p. 114
  12. ^ Ziegler, Philip (1985). Mountbatten. London: Collins. p. 24. ISBN 0-00-216543-0.
  13. ^ Huberty, Michel; Giraud, F. Alain; Magdelaine, F. & B. (1976). L'Allemagne Dynastique: Tome I Hesse-Reuss-Saxe. Le Perreu. p. 345. ISBN 2-901138-01-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ Hough, pp. 117–122
  15. ^ Ziegler, Philip (2004). "Alice, Princess [Princess Alice of Battenberg; married name Princess Andrew of Greece]". In Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/66337. ISBN 978-0-19-861411-1. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  16. ^ Ziegler, Philip (2004). "Mountbatten, George Louis Victor Henry Sergius, second marquess of Milford Haven". In Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/66662. ISBN 978-0-19-861411-1. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  17. ^ Ziegler, Philip (2004). "Mountbatten, Louis Francis Albert Victor Nicholas, first Earl Mountbatten of Burma". In Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31480. ISBN 978-0-19-861411-1. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  18. ^ Hough, pp. 158–159
  19. ^ Hough, p. 169
  20. ^ Hough, pp. 213–214, 372 and 375
  21. ^ Hough, p. 177
  22. ^ Terraine, John; Foreword by Lord Mountbatten (1980). The Life and Times of Lord Mountbatten. London: Arrow Books Ltd. p. 6. ISBN 0-09-922630-8.
  23. ^ Victoria Milford Haven quoted in Hough, p. 215
  24. ^ Hough, p. 264
  25. ^ Hough, p. 289
  26. ^ Hough, p. 274
  27. ^ Vickers, Hugo (2000). Alice, Princess Andrew of Greece. London: Hamish Hamilton. p. 113. ISBN 0-241-13686-5.
  28. ^ Terraine, p. 10
  29. ^ Eilers, Marlene A. (1987). Queen Victoria's Descendants. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Co. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-938311-04-1.
  30. ^ Hough, p. 288
  31. ^ Kerr, Mark (1934). Prince Louis of Battenberg. London: Longmans, Green and Co. p. 261.
  32. ^ Hough, p. 333
  33. ^ Hough, p. 338
  34. ^ Vickers, pp. 200–205
  35. ^ Prince Philip quoted in Hough, p. 354
  36. ^ Duff, David (1967). Hessian Tapestry. London: Muller. pp. 350–353. OCLC 565356978.
  37. ^ Hough, p. 365
  38. ^ Hough, pp. 375 and 382
  39. ^ Ziegler, p. 359
  40. ^ "The Christening of Prince Charles". Royal Collection Trust. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  41. ^ Hough, p. 53
  42. ^ Ziegler, p. 506
  43. ^ The memoir is available online.
  44. ^ Victoria; edited by Hough, Richard (1975). Advice to a grand-daughter: letters from Queen Victoria to Princess Victoria of Hesse. London: Heinemann. ISBN 0-434-34861-9.
  45. ^ Earl Mountbatten of Burma quoted in Hough, p. 339
  46. ^ Lady Pamela Hicks quoted in Hough, p. 373
  47. ^ Quoted in Hough, p. 387
  48. ^ "Goldener Löwen-orden", Großherzoglich Hessische Ordensliste (in German), Darmstadt: Staatsverlag, 1914, p. 1 – via hathitrust.org
  49. ^ a b c "Genealogie", Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Großherzogs Hessen, 1904, p. 2
  50. ^ Joseph Whitaker (1897). An Almanack for the Year of Our Lord ... J. Whitaker. p. 110.
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h Weir, Alison (1996). Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy (Revised ed.). London: Pimlico. pp. 305–307. ISBN 0-7126-7448-9.

Further reading edit

  • Massie, Robert K. (1995). The Romanovs: The Final Chapter. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-40640-8.
  • Miller, Ilana D. (2011). The Four Graces: Queen Victoria's Hessian Granddaughters. East Richmond Heights, California: Kensington House Books. ISBN 978-0-9771961-9-7. A "sisters" biography of the four surviving daughters of Princess Alice, Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine, told from the point of view of Princess Victoria.
  • Mountbatten, Victoria. Recollections of Victoria Mountbatten, Marchioness of Milford Haven (PDF).

External links edit

  • St. Mildred's Church, Whippingham, Isle of Wight
  • The Mountbatten Archive at the University of Southampton
  • Portraits of Victoria, Marchioness of Milford Haven at the National Portrait Gallery, London  

princess, victoria, hesse, rhine, then, princess, louis, battenberg, later, victoria, mountbatten, marchioness, milford, haven, april, 1863, september, 1950, eldest, daughter, louis, grand, duke, hesse, rhine, princess, alice, united, kingdom, daughter, queen,. Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine then Princess Louis of Battenberg later Victoria Mountbatten Marchioness of Milford Haven 5 April 1863 24 September 1950 was the eldest daughter of Louis IV Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine and Princess Alice of the United Kingdom daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha Princess Victoria of Hesse and by RhineMarchioness of Milford HavenPortrait by Alexander Bassano c 1878BornPrincess Victoria Alberta Elisabeth Mathilde Marie of Hesse and by Rhine 1863 04 05 5 April 1863Windsor Castle Windsor Berkshire EnglandDied24 September 1950 1950 09 24 aged 87 Kensington Palace London EnglandBurial28 September 1950St Mildred s Church Whippingham Isle of WightSpouseLouis Mountbatten 1st Marquess of Milford Haven m 1884 died 1921 wbr IssueAlice Princess Andrew of Greece and Denmark Louise Queen of Sweden George Mountbatten 2nd Marquess of Milford Haven Louis Mountbatten 1st Earl Mountbatten of BurmaHouseHesse DarmstadtFatherLouis IV Grand Duke of Hesse and by RhineMotherPrincess Alice of the United KingdomBorn in Windsor Castle in the presence of her maternal grandmother Princess Victoria was raised in Germany and England Her mother died while Victoria s brother and sisters were still young which placed her in an early position of responsibility over her siblings Over her father s disapproval she married his morganatic first cousin Prince Louis of Battenberg an officer in the United Kingdom s Royal Navy and lived most of her married life in various parts of Europe at her husband s naval posts and visiting her many royal relations She was perceived by her family as liberal in outlook straightforward practical and bright During World War I she and her husband abandoned their German titles and adopted the surname of Mountbatten which was an anglicised version of the German Battenberg Two of her sisters Elisabeth and Alix who had married into the Russian imperial family were murdered by communist revolutionaries She was the mother of Queen Louise of Sweden and the British statesman and Royal Navy officer Louis Mountbatten the maternal grandmother of Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh consort of Queen Elizabeth II and paternal great grandmother of King Charles III Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and family 3 Later life 4 Legacy 5 Honours 6 Ancestry 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Four of the Hesse sisters left to right Irene Victoria Elisabeth and Alix 1885Victoria was born on Easter Sunday at Windsor Castle in the presence of her maternal grandmother Queen Victoria She was christened in the Lutheran faith in the Green Drawing Room at Windsor Castle in the arms of the Queen on 27 April 1 Her godparents were Queen Victoria Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge Louis III Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine represented by Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine the Prince of Wales and Prince Heinrich of Hesse and by Rhine 2 Her early life was spent at Bessungen a suburb of Darmstadt until the family moved to the New Palace in Darmstadt when she was three years old There she shared a room with her younger sister Elisabeth until adulthood She was privately educated to a high standard and was throughout her life an avid reader 3 During the Prussian invasion of Hesse in June 1866 Victoria and Elisabeth were sent to Britain to live with their grandmother until hostilities were ended by the absorption of Hesse Kassel and parts of Hesse Darmstadt into Prussia 4 During the Franco Prussian War of 1870 military hospitals were set up in the palace grounds at Darmstadt and she helped in the soup kitchens with her mother She remembered the intense cold of the winter and being burned on the arm by hot soup 5 In 1872 Victoria s eighteen month old brother Friedrich was diagnosed with haemophilia The diagnosis came as a shock to the royal families of Europe it had been twenty years since Queen Victoria had given birth to her haemophiliac son Prince Leopold Duke of Albany and it was the first indication that the bleeding disorder in the royal family was hereditary 6 The following year Friedrich fell from a window onto stone steps and died It was the first of many tragedies to beset the Hesse family 7 nbsp Photograph by Alexander Bassano c 1878In early November 1878 Victoria contracted diphtheria Elisabeth was swiftly moved out of their room and was the only member of the family to escape the disease For days Victoria s mother Princess Alice nursed the sick but she was unable to save her youngest daughter Victoria s sister Marie who died in mid November Just as the rest of the family seemed to have recovered Princess Alice fell ill She died on 14 December the anniversary of the death of her father Prince Albert 8 As the eldest child Victoria partly assumed the role of mother to the younger children and of companion to her father 7 She later wrote My mother s death was an irreparable loss My childhood ended with her death for I became the eldest and most responsible 9 Marriage and family editAt family gatherings Victoria had often met Prince Louis of Battenberg who was her first cousin once removed and a member of a morganatic branch of the Hessian royal family Prince Louis had adopted British nationality and was serving as an officer in the Royal Navy In the winter of 1882 they met again at Darmstadt and were engaged the following summer 10 After a brief postponement because of the death of her maternal uncle Prince Leopold Duke of Albany 11 Victoria married Prince Louis on 30 April 1884 at Darmstadt Her father did not approve of the match in his view Prince Louis his own first cousin had little money and would deprive him of his daughter s company as the couple would naturally live abroad in Britain However Victoria was of an independent mind and took little notice of her father s displeasure 12 Remarkably that same evening Victoria s father secretly married his mistress Countess Alexandrine von Hutten Czapska 13 the former wife of Alexander von Kolemine the Russian charge d affaires in Darmstadt His marriage to a divorcee who was not of equal rank shocked the assembled royalty of Europe and through diplomatic and family pressure Victoria s father was forced to seek an annulment of his own marriage 14 Over the next sixteen years Victoria and her husband had four children Name Birth Death MarriageAlice 25 February 1885 5 December 1969 Married 1903 Prince Andrew of Greece and DenmarkFive children including the Duke of Edinburgh 15 Louise 13 July 1889 7 March 1965 Married 1923 King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden his second marriage One stillborn daughterGeorge 6 November 1892 8 April 1938 Married 1916 Countess Nadejda Mikhailovna de TorbyTwo children 16 Louis 25 June 1900 27 August 1979 Married 1922 Edwina Cynthia Annette AshleyTwo children 17 nbsp Victoria back row second from right at the marriage of her brother Ernest Louis back row right to Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe Coburg and Gotha seated second from right 1894 Nicholas II of Russia and his fiance Alix are on the back row left Irene and Elisabeth are seated front row left and Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich of Russia Elisabeth s husband is seated right They lived in a succession of houses at Chichester Sussex Walton on Thames and Schloss Heiligenberg Jugenheim When Prince Louis was serving with the Mediterranean Fleet she spent some winters in Malta 7 In 1887 she contracted typhoid but after being nursed through her illness by her husband was sufficiently recovered by June to attend Queen Victoria s Golden Jubilee celebrations in London 18 She was interested in science and drew a detailed geological map of Malta and also participated in archaeological digs both on the island and in Germany 19 In leather bound volumes she kept meticulous records of books she had read which reveal a wide range of interests including socialist philosophy 20 She personally taught her own children and exposed them to new ideas and inventions 21 She gave lessons to her younger son Louis until he was ten years of age He said of her in 1968 that she was a walking encyclopedia All through her life she stored up knowledge on all sorts of subjects and she had the great gift of being able to make it all interesting when she taught it to me She was completely methodical we had time tables for each subject and I had to do preparation and so forth She taught me to enjoy working hard and to be thorough She was outspoken and open minded to a degree quite unusual in members of the Royal Family And she was also entirely free from prejudice about politics or colour and things of that kind 22 In 1906 she flew in a Zeppelin airship and even more daringly later flew in a biplane even though it was not made to carry passengers and we perched securely attached on a little stool holding on to the flyer s back 23 Up until 1914 Victoria regularly visited her relatives abroad in both Germany and Russia including her two sisters who had married into the Russian imperial family Elisabeth who had married Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich and Alix who had married Emperor Nicholas II Victoria was one of the Empress s relatives who tried to persuade her away from the influence of Rasputin 24 On the outbreak of war between Germany and Britain in 1914 Victoria and her daughter Louise were in Russia at Yekaterinburg By train and steamer they travelled to St Petersburg and from there through Tornio to Stockholm They sailed from Bergen Norway on the last ship back to Britain 25 Later life edit nbsp A 1917 Punch cartoon depicting King George V sweeping away the German titles held by members of his familyPrince Louis was forced to resign from the navy at the start of the war when his German origins became an embarrassment and the couple retired for the war years to Kent House on the Isle of Wight which Victoria had been given by her aunt Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll 26 Victoria blamed her husband s forced resignation on the Government who few greatly respect or trust 27 She distrusted the First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill because she thought him unreliable he had once borrowed a book and failed to return it 28 Continued public hostility to Germany led King George V of the United Kingdom to renounce his German titles and at the same time on 14 July 1917 Prince Louis and Victoria renounced theirs assuming an anglicised version of Battenberg Mountbatten as their surname 29 Four months later Louis was re ennobled by the King as Marquess of Milford Haven During the war Victoria s two sisters Alix and Elisabeth were murdered in the Russian revolution and her brother Ernest Louis Grand Duke of Hesse was deposed On her last visit to Russia in 1914 Victoria had driven past the very house in Yekaterinburg where Alix would be murdered 30 In January 1921 after a long and convoluted journey Elisabeth s body was interred in Jerusalem in Victoria s presence Alix s body was never recovered during Victoria s lifetime 31 nbsp Victoria in 1932Victoria s husband died in London in September 1921 After meeting her at the Naval and Military Club in Piccadilly he complained of feeling unwell and Victoria persuaded him to rest in a room they had booked in the club annexe She called a doctor who prescribed some medicine and Victoria went out to fill the prescription at a nearby pharmacy When she came back Louis was dead 32 On her widowhood Victoria moved into a grace and favour residence at Kensington Palace and in the words of her biographer became a central matriarchal figure in the lives of Europe s surviving royalty 33 In 1930 her eldest daughter Alice suffered a nervous breakdown and was diagnosed as schizophrenic 34 In the following decade Victoria was largely responsible for her grandson Prince Philip s education and upbringing during his parents separation and his mother s institutionalisation Prince Philip recalled I liked my grandmother very much and she was always helpful She was very good with children she took the practical approach to them She treated them in the right way the right combination of the rational and the emotional 35 In 1937 Victoria s brother Ernest Louis died and soon afterwards her widowed sister in law nephew granddaughter and two of her great grandchildren all died in an air crash at Ostend Victoria s granddaughter Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark had married Victoria s nephew Ernest Louis s son George Donatus of Hesse They and their two young sons Louis and Alexander were all killed Cecilie s youngest child Johanna who was not on the plane was adopted by her uncle Prince Louis of Hesse and by Rhine but the little girl only survived her parents and older brothers by eighteen months dying in 1939 of meningitis 36 Further tragedy soon followed when Victoria s son George died of bone cancer the following year Her granddaughter Lady Pamela Hicks remembered her grandmother s tears 37 In World War II Victoria was bombed out of Kensington Palace and spent some time at Windsor Castle with King George VI Her surviving son Louis and her two grandsons David Mountbatten and Prince Philip served in the Royal Navy while her German relations fought with the opposing forces She spent most of her time reading and worrying about her children her daughter Alice remained in occupied Greece and was unable to communicate with her mother for four years at the height of the war 38 After the Allied victory her son Louis was made Viscount Mountbatten of Burma He was offered the post of Viceroy of India but she was deeply opposed to his accepting knowing that the position would be dangerous and difficult he accepted anyway 39 On 15 December 1948 the Dowager Marchioness attended the christening of her great grandson Prince Charles She was one of eight sponsors or godparents along with King George VI King Haakon VII of Norway Queen Mary Princess Margaret Prince George of Greece and Denmark Lady Brabourne and David Bowes Lyon 40 She fell ill with bronchitis she had smoked since the age of sixteen 41 at Lord Mountbatten s home at Broadlands Hampshire in the summer of 1950 Saying it is better to die at home 42 Victoria moved back to Kensington Palace where she died on 24 September aged 87 She was buried four days later in the grounds of St Mildred s Church Whippingham on the Isle of Wight 7 nbsp Portrait by Philip de Laszlo 1937Legacy editWith the help of her lady in waiting Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden Victoria wrote a memoir held in the Mountbatten archive at the University of Southampton which remains an interesting source for royal historians 7 43 A selection of Queen Victoria s letters to Victoria have been published with a commentary by Richard Hough and an introduction by Victoria s granddaughter Patricia Mountbatten 44 Lord Mountbatten remembered her fondly My mother was very quick on the uptake very talkative very aggressive and argumentative With her marvellous brain she sharpened people s wits 45 Her granddaughter thought her formidable but never intimidating a supremely honest woman full of commonsense and modesty 46 Victoria wrote her own typically forthright epitaph at the end of her life in letters to and conversation with her son What will live in history is the good work done by the individual amp that has nothing to do with rank or title I never thought I would be known only as your mother You re so well known now and no one knows about me and I don t want them to 47 Honours edit nbsp Grand Duchy of Hesse Dame of the Order of the Golden Lion 1 January 1883 48 nbsp Kingdom of Prussia Red Cross Medal 1st Class 49 nbsp Russian Empire Dame Grand Cross of the Order of St Catherine 49 nbsp United Kingdom 49 Queen Victoria Golden Jubilee Medal 1887 Royal Order of Victoria and Albert 1st Class 50 Ancestry editAncestors of Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine8 Louis II Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine4 Prince Charles of Hesse and by Rhine9 Princess Wilhelmine of Baden2 Louis IV Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine 51 10 Prince Wilhelm of Prussia5 Princess Elisabeth of Prussia11 Princess Maria Anna of Hesse Homburg1 Victoria Mountbatten Marchioness of Milford Haven12 Ernest I Duke of Saxe Coburg and Gotha 51 6 Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha 51 13 Princess Louise of Saxe Gotha Altenburg 51 3 Princess Alice of the United Kingdom 51 14 Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn 51 7 Victoria of the United Kingdom 51 15 Princess Victoria of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld 51 References edit Hough Richard 1984 Louis and Victoria The Family History of the Mountbattens Second edition London Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 28 ISBN 0 297 78470 6 Queen Victoria s Journals Monday 27 April 1863 Hough p 30 Hough p 29 Hough p 34 Hough p 36 a b c d e Vickers Hugo 2004 Mountbatten Victoria Alberta Elisabeth Mathilde Marie marchioness of Milford Haven 1863 1950 In Matthew H C G Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 66334 ISBN 978 0 19 861411 1 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hough pp 46 48 Hough p 50 Hough p 57 Hough p 114 Ziegler Philip 1985 Mountbatten London Collins p 24 ISBN 0 00 216543 0 Huberty Michel Giraud F Alain Magdelaine F amp B 1976 L Allemagne Dynastique Tome I Hesse Reuss Saxe Le Perreu p 345 ISBN 2 901138 01 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hough pp 117 122 Ziegler Philip 2004 Alice Princess Princess Alice of Battenberg married name Princess Andrew of Greece In Matthew H C G Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 66337 ISBN 978 0 19 861411 1 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ziegler Philip 2004 Mountbatten George Louis Victor Henry Sergius second marquess of Milford Haven In Matthew H C G Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 66662 ISBN 978 0 19 861411 1 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ziegler Philip 2004 Mountbatten Louis Francis Albert Victor Nicholas first Earl Mountbatten of Burma In Matthew H C G Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31480 ISBN 978 0 19 861411 1 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hough pp 158 159 Hough p 169 Hough pp 213 214 372 and 375 Hough p 177 Terraine John Foreword by Lord Mountbatten 1980 The Life and Times of Lord Mountbatten London Arrow Books Ltd p 6 ISBN 0 09 922630 8 Victoria Milford Haven quoted in Hough p 215 Hough p 264 Hough p 289 Hough p 274 Vickers Hugo 2000 Alice Princess Andrew of Greece London Hamish Hamilton p 113 ISBN 0 241 13686 5 Terraine p 10 Eilers Marlene A 1987 Queen Victoria s Descendants Baltimore Maryland Genealogical Publishing Co p 187 ISBN 978 0 938311 04 1 Hough p 288 Kerr Mark 1934 Prince Louis of Battenberg London Longmans Green and Co p 261 Hough p 333 Hough p 338 Vickers pp 200 205 Prince Philip quoted in Hough p 354 Duff David 1967 Hessian Tapestry London Muller pp 350 353 OCLC 565356978 Hough p 365 Hough pp 375 and 382 Ziegler p 359 The Christening of Prince Charles Royal Collection Trust Retrieved 18 February 2022 Hough p 53 Ziegler p 506 The memoir is available online Victoria edited by Hough Richard 1975 Advice to a grand daughter letters from Queen Victoria to Princess Victoria of Hesse London Heinemann ISBN 0 434 34861 9 Earl Mountbatten of Burma quoted in Hough p 339 Lady Pamela Hicks quoted in Hough p 373 Quoted in Hough p 387 Goldener Lowen orden Grossherzoglich Hessische Ordensliste in German Darmstadt Staatsverlag 1914 p 1 via hathitrust org a b c Genealogie Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogs Hessen 1904 p 2 Joseph Whitaker 1897 An Almanack for the Year of Our Lord J Whitaker p 110 a b c d e f g h Weir Alison 1996 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Revised ed London Pimlico pp 305 307 ISBN 0 7126 7448 9 Further reading editMassie Robert K 1995 The Romanovs The Final Chapter New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 345 40640 8 Miller Ilana D 2011 The Four Graces Queen Victoria s Hessian Granddaughters East Richmond Heights California Kensington House Books ISBN 978 0 9771961 9 7 A sisters biography of the four surviving daughters of Princess Alice Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine told from the point of view of Princess Victoria Mountbatten Victoria Recollections of Victoria Mountbatten Marchioness of Milford Haven PDF External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Victoria Mountbatten Marchioness of Milford Haven St Mildred s Church Whippingham Isle of Wight The Mountbatten Archive at the University of Southampton Portraits of Victoria Marchioness of Milford Haven at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine amp oldid 1185064538, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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