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Prior to queen Alexandrina

Alexandrina's mother and father

Controversy over naming the daughter

Alexandrina's life and her father's death

Alexandrina, the new queen

The wedding

Alexandrina after Albert's death

Alexandrina Victoria's death

Queen Alexandrina Victoria's nine children

This compilation of text has been compiled to provide the reader with essential information and thought patterns that may trigger further study. My effort in compiling this texts is by no means a declaration of any inclination of supporting parties of people who oppose, directly or indirectly, the rightful rising of the African Man, Woman and Child. The applied use of knowledge is Power.
You are here:>> Ivory Matrix > The Royals of the 1800s

A lengthy description
of The royal family
during the 1800s

[[Queen Alexandrina Victoria reigned between 20 Jun 1837 - 22 Jan 1901 and was married to Francis Albert Augustus Charles Emmanuel (a.k.a Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha). Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha was born 26 August 1819 at Schloss Rosenau Near Coburg in Germany. His father was Duke Ernest I of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, and his mother was Louise of Saxe-Coburg-Altenburg.]]

Prior to queen Alexandrina

Prince Edward Augustus Hanover, the Duke of Kent, was one of the four sons to King George III and Queen Sophie Charlotte. The Charlotte was the daughter of Francis Fredrick, the Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld and Augusta Reuss-Ebersdorf. She appears in certain a variety of paintings to be of different origin, sometimes depicted as of African descent and other times white. But the mystery to this puzzle has been solved because her family line of heritage is now said to be from Margarita de Castro y Sousa, a black branch of the Portuguese Royal House. This was solved as a result of an earlier investigation into the black magi featured in 15th century Flemish paintings. It was suggested by two art historians that the black magi must have been portraits of actual contemporary people (since the artist, without seeing them, would not have been aware of the subtleties in colouring and facial bone structure which these figures invariably represented). Enough evidence was accumulated to conclude that the models for the black magi were, in all probability, actual members of the Portuguese de Sousa family. (Several de Sousa had in fact travelled to the Netherlands when their cousin, the Princess Isabella went there to marry the Grand Duke, Philip the Good of Burgundy in the year 1429.)

Charlotte played a distinguished, yet silently wise character on the stage of European world history. As the Queen of England and consort of George III she became an eyewitness of a turbulent age, of course referring to persons like Willie Lynch and the launching 'his' evil orientation that will be disclosed in coming chapters.

On the other hand, during the lifetime of Charlotte and George, the English court had the reputation of being the dullest in all of Europe because of their notoriously frugal, plain, and pious life-style. It must be considered that Africans have never lived lives of a physically overt outlook, but for tens of thousands of years we have been directly connected to nature and the spirit of life with the outlook of peace and humanity. We were much more about preservation that destructive tendencies, and this was probably why the other class saw the royal court as dull and plain since they were much used to blood shed and other evil deeds.

The King and Queen's charities, however, were legend. Charlotte herself founded hospitals such as the famous Queen's Lying-in Hospital in London, UK. Orphanages, "decayed" musicians, and untold poor families could rely on the Royal patronage. Eight-year-old Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart fulfilled Queen Charlotte's request and dedicated his Opus 3 to her. When her court musician and music teacher Johann Christian Bach died of consumption, she paid for his funeral and established a pension for his widow. Now that is what the African is traditionally about. In European history, every time they gained something it was at the expense of others. This time things seemed different somewhat.

Because king George III was said to have become insane toward the end of his rule said to be by inheriting malady porphyry (but probably due to his wife identifying with the atrocities that were commencing elsewhere and then highlighting them to him and he then finding that he could not cope with the truth), so Edward's oldest brother George served as the country's regent in 1812 after a little controversy and almost being murdered by his daddy.

You see, in 1772 George III supposedly invoked a Royal Marriage Act that prevented his descendants from marriage before the age of twenty-five without his consent. In addition it was highly likely that his descendants would only be able to marry Protestants. The result of this rather strange law was that his children sought refuge in secret marriages and illicit love affairs or stayed unmarried.

After Queen Charlotte's death at Kew palace in 1818, people began to worry about the royal succession. Although the King had twelve living children, none of them had offspring who were now eligible to inherit the throne due to this new law and the practices that came out of it. Parliament and the public wanted the King's four unmarried sons to find wives and three of them - including the 50-year-old Duke of Kent - quickly did so. top

Alexandrina's mother and father

Prince Edward Augustus Hanover, the 50 year old Duke, chose a German princess, Victoire of Saxe-Coburg, age 31, to be his bride. She was the widow of Prince Emich Charles of Leiningen in Germany, and the sister of King Leopold I of the Belgians. Victoire had two children from her previous marriage, Charles and Feodora. Edward VII (a.k.a Edward Augustus Hanover) and Victoire barely spoke each other's languages, but nevertheless, it is said that they soon became fond of one another. They were married in July of 1818. On May 24, 1819 the Duchess Victoire of Kent gave birth to a daughter. (The baby was delivered by a female doctor, Frau Siebold, who later that year attended the birth of Victoire's nephew, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg.) top

Controversy over naming the daughter

The Duke and Duchess planned to name their daughter Georgiana Charlotte Augusta Alexandrina Victoria. However, the Prince Regent (the eldest son George), who was one of the baby's godfathers, refused to allow his own name (George) or his late daughter's name (Charlotte Augusta, where Sophia Charlotte, who was Charlotte Augusta's grandmother, was considered to be a coloured with Negro features) to be bestowed upon this possible future queen. He announced that the baby would be named Alexandrina after her other godfather, Russian tsar Alexander I, which broke the ties with an African ancestry traceable through the name Charlotte. When Edward suggested Elizabeth as a second name, the Prince Regent shook his head and declared, "Give her the mother's name also then, but it cannot precede that of the emperor." So the future Queen Victoria was christened Alexandrina Victoria. As a small child she was nicknamed Drina, although her mother preferred to call her Victoria, probably because it resembled her own. top

Alexandrina's life and her father's death

That winter, of 1819, Edward the Duke of Kent is said to have caught a cold, which turned into pneumonia. He died when his daughter was only eight months old. Other sources state that Victoire of Saxe-Coburg killed all of her husbands, but how true this is currently inconclusive. It is also said that Leopold and Victoire conspired to keep Victoria in the English royal family by arranging a marriage between her and a cousin on the German side of the family. Within a week of Edward's passing King George III had also died from his malady porphyry amongst other possible ailments. The Prince Regent became King George IV (Alexandrina's uncle on the father's side of the family). Young Alexandrina was to be brought up at Kensington Palace. It is said that the Duchess Victoire of Kent feared that Alexandrina would be murdered by one of her uncles so that he would be able claim her place in the line of succession, so the princess was never left alone. Even in the schoolroom watchful eyes surrounded her. Until the age of three she spoke only German revealing that only the mother had any real input into her upbringing, but she soon learned to speak English without a trace of an accent (the wonderful queen's English that rich folk love to imitate, it seems not to be indigenous to the English). She also chose to learn Italian because she loved opera, this could have been Queen Charlotte's dedication to music (a connection to spirit) living on in the diluted bloodline of Margarita de Castro y Sousa, the Black linage of the Portuguese Royal House.

Although Alexandrina's favourite subject was history, she did not realize at first that she was destined to play a major historical role, as did her Grandmother. When she was 11 years old she saw a royal family tree and supposedly remarked, "I am nearer to the throne than I thought." Then (according to her governess) she vowed, "I will be good." By Victoria's own account, she "cried much" on learning that she might one day be queen. Victoria was so overprotected that she was not permitted to walk up or down a staircase unless she was holding someone's hand. The person mainly responsible for keeping her under close guard was her mother's consort, John Conroy, who hoped to gain an important post in Victoria's government. It has been said that King George IV considered marrying Victoria's older stepsister, Feodora (this would have been his niece-in-law). Instead the Duchess of Kent arranged for Feodora to marry a German prince -- purportedly at Conroy's urging, because if she married the king she might have children who would precede Victoria in the line of succession. (Despite their age difference, Feodora and Victoria were close friends). Although Victoria was generally healthy, once during her teens she became very sick, probably from complications of tonsillitis. Thinking to exploit her weakness, Conroy asked her to sign a document stating that he would be her secretary when she became queen. Victoria refused. top

Alexandrina, the new queen

George IV died in 1830 some ten years after his father, and was succeeded by his brother, William IV. When William died on June 20, 1837, eighteen-year-old Alexandrina Victoria became England's queen who was crowned at Westminster Abbey on 28 Jun 1838

Queen Victoria immediately began to take charge of her own life. Before becoming queen she had been required to sleep in her mother's room; now she slept in her own bedchamber. She avoided both her mother and Conroy, who continued to work for the Duchess of Kent. Two years after Victoria's accession Conroy was indirectly involved in one of the greatest scandals of her reign. One of the queen's unmarried ladies-in-waiting, Flora Hastings, showed signs of pregnancy, and Victoria believed her to be carrying Conroy's child. In fact, Flora turned out to be a virgin, and her symptoms were caused by an illness that soon killed her. Victoria's unkind treatment of Flora Hastings -- which she came to bitterly regret -- caused a public outcry. As a result of the Hastings scandal Conroy resigned his post in the Duchess of Kent's household and left the country. Drastic measures eh? Unless there was something even more secret than having a Negro in the family at play here.

Victoria's first prime minister was Lord Melbourne. They became close friends and he helped her learn her role as queen. Because of her loyalty to Melbourne, the queen supported his party, the Whigs, early in her reign. Later her husband, Prince Albert, persuaded her that the monarch should not favour any particular party. Albert was Victoria's first cousin. They had first met at the age of sixteen. Although they did not fall in love immediately, they enjoyed each other's company. Their family wanted them to marry, and Victoria readily agreed. Albert visited England again in 1839, when Victoria was nineteen and queen. This time Victoria fell in love at first sight. She described Albert as "excessively handsome, such beautiful eyes . . . my heart is quite going." She soon proposed to him, and Albert accepted. The full influences of her mother and uncle Leopold over the pairing-off are lesser known. The genetic mutations that were about to manifest in the royal dynasty of Saxe-Coburg, because of the incest that was happening and continually occurring was set to begin taking lives. top

The wedding

Their wedding took place the following year 10 February 1840 at Chapel Royal St. James Palace in England, and the marriage was an extremely happy one, or so they say. Victoria and Albert had nine children. Because the queen was confined by her multiple pregnancies, Albert undertook many of her responsibilities, one included introducing the Victorian Christmas. Victoria herself said that Albert was king in all but name. In fact, she wished to give him the title "king," but that was something the English people would not accept even though subconsciously this is what she was being forced into. At first Albert was unpopular, but in time his hard work brought him greater acceptance. In 1857 the queen persuaded Parliament to officially grant him the title "Prince Consort." Albert's health was always poor. In November 1861 he contracted typhoid fever; he died the following month at the age of 42. top

Alexandrina after Albert's death

Victoria was distraught after Albert's death. She wrote to her eldest daughter, "How I, who leant on him for all and everything - without whom I did nothing, moved not a finger, arranged not a print or photograph, didn't put on a gown or bonnet if he didn't approve it shall go on, to live, to move, to help myself in difficult moments?" Queen Victoria remained a hermit at Balmoral and Windsor for many years after her husband died, and wore black for the rest of her life. Albert's rooms were maintained exactly as they had been when he was alive; the servants even brought hot water for shaving to his dressing room each morning. None of this was particularly unusual during the Victorian era, however the extent to which Victoria tried to keep her dead husband alive saw her looting the occult in secrecy. In time Victoria's depression lifted and she resumed her royal duties, but she never ceased mourning for Albert. The deeper significances shall be uncovered. It is said to be while confined at Balmoral and Windsor the queen, with the later accompaniment of John Brown, an outspoken Scot who was to become a favourite of the Prince Consort, delved deeply into the unknown with the hope for good results. The non-presence of melanin could only result in Victoria and her occult consort calling up evil spirits.

Victoria visited Germany, her mother's homeland, in the summer after Albert's death. Among her attendants on the trip was John Brown. In the same year Victoria was involved in two carriage accidents, and both times John Brown was on hand to save the day. In 1864 Brown was brought to England to lead the queen's pony when she went riding. The next year Victoria wrote in her diary, "Have decided that Brown should remain permanently and make himself useful in other ways besides leading my pony as he is so very dependable." Brown quickly became the most important person in the queen's life. He said to be a good-looking man, five years younger than the queen, and their close relationship caused much gossip. As one nobleman wrote, "The queen has taken a fancy to a certain Scotch servant, by name Brown: will have no one else to wait upon her, makes him drive her out alone in a pony carriage, walk with, rather than after her, gives orders through him to the equerries, allows him access to her such as no one else has . . . [Her Majesty] is talked of as 'Mrs. Brown.'" In 1998 the producer of the movie Mrs. Brown revealed that he had seen a previously unknown cache of "love letters" exchanged by Queen Victoria and John Brown.

It is highly doubtful that Brown and Victoria were actually lovers, although the queen's daughters jokingly called Brown "Mama's lover." His intimacy with the queen did not please Victoria's family, but Brown was indispensable to her, and remained her confidante for nearly twenty years. The scandal faded in time as people became accustomed to his constant presence. The queen became rather friendly with one of her daughters-in-law, Alexandra the princess of Wales, and Michael Harrison writes:

Alexandra--'Alix'--came from a land where ghosts were, and are still, taken au grand serieux; where the ancient communion with the family dead maintained the old customs--the meals laid out for the wandering spirits, the curious ceremonies at tumulus and carved stone and bog tomb to pacify the rebellious shades of the long ago dead. As a daughter of the royal house of Denmark, she knew the old tales, knew of the old superstitions; acknowledged, if you will, that the dead are never quite dead, and that prudent people never begrudge the small, traditionally proven acts by which the dead may be kept, if not exactly friendly, then at least powerless to wreak harm.

The dead are never quite dead, which is an understandable statement when traditional spirituality is considered that connects the living to the dead, although European knowledge of this can only be borrowed or stolen. Prince Albert was not allowed to pass away completely. The madness that Princess Victoria Adelaide Mary Louise feared in her mother was the heredity madness of queen Victoria's grandfather, King George III. A violent, vicious madness raged throughout the House of Hanover that was blamed on bad blood. Likewise, a strain of neurotic melancholy ran through the members of Prince Albert's family, the Saxe-Coburg Gotha, which was blamed on a curse. With the "bad blood" of one and the blood curse of the other, Victoria and Albert were the genetic repositories of their respective royal houses. Through them, the pride and folly of previous generations were played out; in them, the dead were not entirely dead. For together, Victoria and Albert created the scourge of haemophilia, "the royal disease," which toppled many a throne in Europe in the early years of the twentieth century. The cherry on top of the disorder was simply, 'there will be no more Hanovers'. Victoria and Albert together founded a new dynasty in England as oppose to the old Hanover dynasty. The new name is that of the House of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, where the territory of Gotha was further included after the successful conclusion of the Napoleonic wars.

When John Brown died in 1883, the queen wrote, "The shock - the blow, the blank, the constant missing at every turn of the one strong, powerful reliable arm and head almost stunned me and I am truly overwhelmed." Victoria erected a statue of John at Balmoral. His room, like Albert's, became a shrine. A flower was placed on his pillow every day until Victoria herself died. The queen was so grief-stricken that she could not walk for a year; for the rest of her life she used a cane or wheelchair. During Victoria's reign, Britain expanded into an empire, and this empire was built with the blood, sweat and tears of Black Men, Women and Children. Victoria became an icon and symbol of her age leaving her name engraved in the English timeline. The fiftieth year of her reign, 1887, was marked with a Golden Jubilee of public celebration, followed ten years later by a Diamond Jubilee. The English were bound to have shown their patriarchy as they did so this time round (2002).

{Just out of curiosity, the Mayans predicted the end of the world - as we know it - to be December 2012. 2002 marked the 50th year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth the II and has too been commemorated with a Golden Jubilee. If Queen Elizabeth is still reigning in 2012 will this also see a celebration of her Diamond Jubilee? And if it does, what is the significance between the predictions of the Mayans and the role that these sodomites are, and have been, playing? Stay tuned!} top

Alexandrina Victoria's death

Queen Victoria died in 1901, at the age of 81. She had left elaborate instructions for her funeral. As she had wished, her own sons lifted her into the coffin. She wore a white dress and her wedding veil. Because Victoria had disliked black funerals, London was festooned in purple and white. She was buried beside Prince Albert in the Frogmore Royal Mausoleum at Windsor Castle.

The queen's 63-year reign was the longest in the history of England. Her descendants, including 40 grandchildren, married into almost every royal family of Europe. This goes to show that any current country with royal descendants from Britain are in communion of power, which will probably result in a friendly approach between royal acquaintances i.e. leading ministers, leading policing officials etc. With her personal example of honesty, patriotism and devotion to family life Victoria became a living symbol of the solidity of the British Empire. The many years of her reign, often referred to as the Victorian age, witnessed the rise of middle class and were marked by a deeply conservative morality and intense nationalism. She was obsessed with the collecting of memorabilia of her family.

Queen Alexandina Victoria had nine children who were

Princess Victoria Adelaide Mary Louise was born in 1840. Her nickname in the family was Vicky. She married Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia when she was 17. Her husband became emperor of Germany, but died of throat cancer after a three-month reign. Vicky had seven children. Her eldest son became German emperor Wilhelm II; her daughter Sophie married a Greek prince and in time became the queen of Greece.

Prince Albert Edward was born in 1841. His nickname was Bertie. In 1863 he married Princess Alexandra of Denmark. They had six children, including a daughter named Maud who became the queen consort of Norway. After Queen Victoria's death in 1901, Bertie ascended to the throne as King Edward VII. He died in 1910 and was succeeded by his son, King George V.

Princess Alice Maud Mary was born in 1843. At age 18 she married Prince Ludwig or Louis of Hesse (later Grand Duke Louis XIV). Their seven children included a daughter, Alix, who became the wife of Russia's last tsar, Nicholas II. The first of Queen Victoria's children to die, Alice succumbed to diptheria in 1878 at the age of 35.

Prince Alfred Ernest Albert was born in 1844. His nickname in the family was Affie. In 1874 he married Grand Duchess Marie, the daughter of Tsar Alexander II of Russia, probably another incest relationship. When Alfred was 50 he became the duke of Saxe-Coburg. His only son, also named Alfred, died in 1899 as the result of suicide by a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Alfred was said to be suffering from tuberculosis aggravated by venereal disease and longed to alleviate his pain, so when Alfred took his own life in 1900 his brother Leopold's son, Charles, succeeded him. The eldest of Affie's four daughters, Marie, married the crown prince of Romania, who later became King Ferdinand I.

Princess Helena Augusta Victoria was born in 1846. Her nickname was Lenchen. In 1866 she married Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein, with whom she had five children. Their marriage lasted 51 years. Lenchen died in 1923.

Princess Louise Caroline Alberta was born in 1848. At the age of 23 she married John Campbell, Marquis of Lorne (later the Duke of Argyll). It was a troubled marriage, and they had no children. Princess Louise lived until 1939. Prince Arthur William Patrick was born in 1850. In 1879 he married Princess Luise Margarete of Prussia. They had three children. Prince Arthur lived until 1942, when he died at the age of 92.

Prince Leopold George Duncan was born in 1853. In 1882 he married Princess Helena Frederica of Waldeck. They had two children. Prince Leopold was a hemophiliac, and just two years after his marriage he died at the age of 30. In 1900 his son Charles Edward became the duke of Saxe-Coburg and later engaged himself under the Nazi ruler-ship of Hitler.

Princess Beatrice Mary Victoria was born in 1857. Her nickname in the family was Baby. She married Prince Henry of Battenberg in 1885, despite Queen Victoria's disapproval of the match. Beatrice and Henry had four children, including Victoria Eugenie, who became the queen of Spain. Beatrice died in 1944.

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