Edward VII (Albert Edward; 9
November 1841 – 6 May 1910) was King of the
United Kingdom
and the British Dominions
and Emperor of India from 22
January 1901 until his death on 6 May 1910. He was the first
British monarch of
the
House of Saxe-Coburg
and Gotha, which was renamed the
House of Windsor by his son,
George V.
Before his accession to the throne, Edward held the title of
Prince of Wales and was
heir apparent to the throne for longer than
anyone else in history. During the long widowhood of his mother,
Queen Victoria, he
was largely excluded from political power and came to personify the
fashionable, leisured elite.
The
Edwardian period, 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
powered flight and
the rise of
socialism and the Labour
movement. Edward played a role in the modernisation of the
British Home Fleet, the reform of the
Army Medical Services, and the
reorganisation of the British army after the
Second Boer War.
He fostered good
relations between Great Britain and other European countries,
especially France
, for which
he was popularly called "Peacemaker", but his relationship with his
nephew, Wilhelm II of
Germany, was poor. Edward presciently suspected that
Wilhelm would precipitate a war, and four years after Edward's
death,
World War I brought an end to the
Edwardian way of life.
Early life
Edward was
born at 10:48 a.m. on 9 November 1841 in Buckingham
Palace
. His mother was
Queen Victoria, the only
daughter of
Prince Edward, Duke
of Kent and Strathearn and
Princess Victoria of
Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. His father was
Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and
Gotha, first cousin and
consort
of Victoria.
He was christened Albert
Edward (after his father and maternal grandfather) at
St. George's Chapel, Windsor
Castle
, on 25 January 1842. His godparents were
the King of Prussia,
his paternal
grandfather's wife
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
great-grandfather's wife
the Dowager Duchess of
Saxe-Coburg-Altenburg (for whom
the Duchess of Cambridge,
his great-aunt, stood proxy), his great-aunt
the 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. He was known as
Bertie
to the family throughout his life.
the eldest son of a 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. Queen Victoria created her son
Prince of Wales and
Earl of Chester on 8 December 1841. He was
created
Earl of Dublin on 17 January
1850, a
Knight of the Garter on
9 November 1858 and a
Knight of the
Thistle on 24 May 1867. In 1863, he renounced his succession
rights to the Duchy of
Saxe-Coburg
and Gotha in favour of his younger brother,
Prince Alfred.
Education
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert determined that their eldest son
should have an education that would prepare him to be a model
constitutional monarch. At
age seven, Edward embarked upon a rigorous educational programme
devised by Prince Albert, and under the supervision of several
tutors. However, unlike
his
elder sister, Edward did not excel in his studies. 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.
After an
educational trip to Rome
, undertaken
in the first few months of 1859, he spent the summer of that year
studying at the University of
Edinburgh under, amongst others, Lyon
Playfair. In October he matriculated as an
undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford
. Now released from the educational
strictures imposed by his parents, he enjoyed studying for the
first time and performed satisfactorily in examinations.
In 1861,
Edward transferred to Trinity College, Cambridge
, where he was tutored in history by Charles Kingsley, Regius Professor of
Modern History. Kingsley's efforts brought forth the best
academic performances of Edward's life, and Edward actually looked
forward to his lectures.
Early adulthood
In 1860, Edward undertook the first tour of
North America by an heir to the British
throne. His genial good humour and confident
bonhomie made
the tour a great success.
He inaugurated the Victoria Bridge,
Montreal
, across the St Lawrence River
, and laid the cornerstone of Parliament
Hill, Ottawa
. He watched 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.
Prayers
for the royal family were said in Trinity
Church, New York
, for the first time since 1776. 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.
Upon his return, Edward hoped to pursue a career in the
British Army, but this was denied him because
he was heir to the throne. His military ranks were honorary. 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. Queen Victoria
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, the Crown Princess of
Prussia. Edward's elder sister, acting upon instructions
from their mother, had met Princess 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.
From this time, Edward gained a reputation as a playboy.
Determined to get some army experience,
Edward attended manoeuvres in Ireland
, during which an actress, Nellie Clifton, was hidden in his tent by his
fellow officers. 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. 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."
Marriage
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 Constantinople
. As soon as he returned to Britain,
preparations were made for his engagement, which was sealed at
Laeken
in Belgium
on 9 September 1862. Edward and Alexandra married at St. George's
Chapel, Windsor
, on 10 March 1863. Edward was 21; Alexandra
was 18.
Edward
and his wife 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. Queen Victoria was of two minds
whether it was a suitable match given the political climate. After
the couple's marriage, she expressed anxiety about their
socialite lifestyle and attempted to dictate to
them on various matters, including the names of their
children.
Edward had mistresses throughout his married life. He socialised
with actress
Lillie Langtry;
Lady Randolph Churchill (mother of
Winston Churchill);
Daisy Greville, Countess of
Warwick; actress
Sarah
Bernhardt;
Alice Keppel; singer
Hortense Schneider; prostitute
Giulia Barucci; and wealthy humanitarian
Agnes Keyser. At least fifty-five liaisons are
conjectured. 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.
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's 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.
The story that Queen Alexandra invited Edward's last mistress,
society beauty
Alice Keppel, to the
King's death-bed in 1910 is a myth that Alice herself propagated.
In reality Alice was, most reluctantly, asked at the King's request
and, in a wild fit of hysterics, she was ejected shrieking, "I
never did any harm, there was nothing wrong between us. What is to
become of me?" One of Alice Keppel's great-granddaughters,
Camilla Parker Bowles, became
the wife of
Charles, Prince of
Wales, one of Edward's great-great grandsons. It was rumoured
that Camilla's grandmother,
Sonia Keppel (born in May
1900), was the illegitimate daughter of Edward, but she was "almost
certainly" the daughter of
George Keppel, whom she resembled.
Edward never acknowledged any illegitimate children. Alexandra is
believed to have been aware of many of his affairs and to have
accepted them.
Heir apparent
During
Queen Victoria's widowhood, Edward represented her at public
ceremonies and gatherings—for example, opening Halifax Town
Hall
in 1863, Thames Embankment
in 1871, Mersey
Tunnel in 1886, and Tower Bridge
in 1894—pioneering the idea of royal public
appearances as we understand them today. However, his mother
did not allow Edward an active role in the running of the country
until 1898. He annoyed his mother by siding with Denmark on the
Schleswig-Holstein
Question in 1864 (she was pro-German) and in the same year
annoyed her again by making a special effort to meet
Garibaldi.

Victoria visits Edward during his
illness.
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. However, in the winter of 1871, a brush with death
led to an improvement both in Edward's popularity with the public
as well as in his relationship with his mother.
While staying at
Londesborough Lodge, near
Scarborough,
North Yorkshire
, Edward contracted typhoid,
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. 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.
In 1875, Edward set off for India on an extensive eight-month tour
of the sub-continent. 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." At the end of the tour, his
mother was given the title Empress of India by Parliament, in part
as a result of the tour's success.
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." 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 fast to create more time
for shooting. This so-called tradition of
Sandringham Time continued until 1936, when
it was abolished by
Edward VIII. 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) and another of Edward's
horses, Ambush II, won the
Grand
National.
Edward made wearing
tweed,
Homburg hats and
Norfolk jackets fashionable. He popularised
the wearing of black ties with dinner jackets, instead of
white tie and tails, and pioneered the pressing of
trouser legs from side to side in preference to the now normal
front and back creases.
A stickler for proper dress, he is said to
have admonished the Prime Minister, Lord Salisbury, for
wearing the trousers of an Elder Brother of Trinity House
with a Privy
Councillor's coat. Deep in an international crisis, the
Prime Minister informed the Prince of Wales that it had been a dark
morning, and that "my mind must have been occupied by some subject
of less importance." The tradition of men not buttoning the bottom
button of suit-coats is said to be linked to Edward, who supposedly
left his undone due to his large girth. His waist measured
48 inches (122 cm) shortly before his coronation. He
introduced the practice of eating roast beef, roast potatoes,
horseradish sauce and
yorkshire
pudding on Sundays, which remains a staple British favourite
for Sunday lunch.
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 players unsuccessfully sued his fellow
players for slander after being accused of cheating. 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. Usually, Edward's outbursts of temper
were short-lived, and "after he had let himself go ... [he
would] smooth matters by being especially nice".
In 1892, Edward's eldest son, Albert Victor, was engaged to
Princess Victoria Mary of Teck. Just a
few weeks after the engagement, 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". Albert Victor was the second of Edward's children
to die. In 1871, his youngest son, John, had died just 24 hours
after being born. Edward had insisted on placing John in his coffin
personally with "the tears rolling down his cheeks".
On his way to Denmark through Belgium on 4 April 1900 Edward was
the victim of an attempted assassination, when
Jean-Baptiste Sipido shot at him in
protest over the
Boer War. Sipido
escaped to France; the perceived delay of the Belgian authorities
in applying for extradition, combined with British disgust at
Belgian atrocities in the
Congo,
worsened the already poor relationship 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.
Accession
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. He chose to reign
under the name Edward VII, instead of Albert Edward—the name his
mother had intended for him to use, declaring that he did not wish
to "undervalue the name of Albert" and diminish the status of his
father with whom among royalty the name Albert should stand alone.
The
number 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". 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
1660's."
He
donated his parents' house, Osborne on
the Isle of
Wight
, to the state and continued to live at
Sandringham. He could afford to be magnanimous; it was
claimed that he was the first heir to succeed to the throne in
credit. Edward's finances had been ably managed by Sir
Dighton Probyn,
Comptroller of the Household,
and had benefited from advice from Edward's Jewish financier
friends, such as
Ernest Cassel,
Maurice de Hirsch and the
Rothschild family. At a time of widespread
anti-Semitism, Edward attracted
criticism for openly socialising with Jews.
Edward
VII and Alexandra were crowned at Westminster Abbey
on 9 August 1902 by the 80-year-old Archbishop of Canterbury, Frederick Temple, who died only four months
later. Edward's coronation had originally been scheduled for
26 June, but two days before on 24 June, Edward was diagnosed with
appendicitis. Thanks to developments in
anaesthesia and
antisepsis in the preceding 50 years, he
underwent a life-saving operation, performed by Sir
Frederick Treves. This was
at a time when appendicitis was generally not treated operatively
and carried a high mortality rate. Treves, with the support of
Lord Lister,
performed a then-radical operation of draining the infected
appendix through a small incision. The next day, Edward was sitting
up in bed, smoking a cigar. Two weeks later, it was announced that
the King was out of danger. Treves was honoured with a baronetcy
(which Edward had arranged before the operation) and appendix
surgery entered the medical mainstream.
Edward refurbished the royal palaces, reintroduced the traditional
ceremonies, such as the
State Opening of Parliament,
that his mother had foregone, and founded new orders of
decorations, such as the
Order of
Merit, to recognise contributions to the arts and sciences. The
Shah of Persia,
Mozzafar-al-Din, visited England in
1902, expecting to receive the
Order
of the Garter. Edward refused to give this high honour to the
Shah because the order was meant to be his personal gift and the
Foreign Secretary,
Lord
Lansdowne, had promised the order without his consent. Edward
also objected to inducting a
Muslim into a
Christian order of chivalry. His refusal
threatened to damage British attempts to gain influence in Persia,
but Edward resented his ministers' attempts to reduce the King's
traditional powers. Eventually, he relented and Britain sent a
special embassy to the Shah with a full Order of the Garter the
following year.
"Uncle of Europe"
As king, Edward's main interests lay in the fields of foreign
affairs and naval and military matters.
Fluent in French and German, he made a number of visits abroad,
and took annual holidays in Biarritz
and Marienbad
. One of his most important foreign trips was
an official visit to France in spring 1903 as the guest of
President
Émile Loubet.
Following
a visit to the Pope 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 between the French foreign minister,
Théophile Delcassé, and the
British foreign secretary,
Lord Lansdowne. Signed on 8 April 1904 by Lansdowne and the
French ambassador
Paul Cambon, 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.
Edward, mainly through his mother and his father-in-law, was
related to nearly every other European monarch and came to be known
as the "uncle of Europe".
The
German Emperor Wilhelm II,
Tsar Nicholas II of Russia,
Grand Duke Ernest Louis of
Hesse and
Duke Charles
Edward of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha were Edward's nephews;
Queen Victoria Eugenia of
Spain,
Crown Princess
Margaret of Sweden,
Crown
Princess Marie of Romania,
Crown
Princess Sophia of Greece and
Empress Alexandra
Feodorovna of Russia were his nieces;
King Haakon VII of Norway was both his
nephew by marriage and his son-in-law;
King George I of Greece and
King Frederick VIII of Denmark
were his brothers-in-law;
King
Albert I of Belgium,
King
Charles I and
King Manuel II
of Portugal,
Tsar Ferdinand of
Bulgaria,
Queen
Wilhelmina of the Netherlands and
Prince Ernst August, Duke of
Brunswick-Lüneburg, were his cousins. Edward doted on his
grandchildren, and indulged them, to the consternation of their
governesses. However, there was one relation whom Edward did not
like and his difficult relationship with his nephew,
Wilhelm II, exacerbated the
tensions between Germany and Britain.
In 1908,
Edward became the first British monarch to visit the Russian
Empire
, despite refusing to visit in 1906, when
Anglo-Russian relations were strained in the aftermath of the
Dogger Bank
incident
, the Russo-Japanese
war and the Tsar's dissolution of the Duma.
Political controversies
Edward involved himself heavily in discussions over army reform,
the need for which had become apparent with the failings of the
Boer War. He supported the re-design
of army command, the creation of the
Territorial Army, and the
decision to provide an Expeditionary Force supporting France in the
event of war with Germany. 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. 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.
Edward 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 would be retained. 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 Knyvet Wilson,
who had retired in 1907. 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.
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 H.
H. Asquith. The King let Asquith know that he
would only be willing to appoint additional peers, if necessary, to
enable the budget's passage in the House of Lords, if Asquith won
two successive general elections.
Edward was rarely interested in politics, although his views on
some issues were notably liberal for the time. During his reign he
said use of the word "
nigger" was
"disgraceful" despite it then being in common parlance.
While
Prince of Wales, he had to be dissuaded from breaking with
constitutional precedent by openly voting for Gladstone's Representation of the
People Bill in the House of Lords
. On other matters he was less progressive—he
did not favour
Irish Home Rule
(initially preferring a form of
dual
monarchy) or giving
votes to
women, although he did suggest that the social reformer
Octavia Hill serve on the Commission
for Working Class Housing. Edward lived a life of luxury that was
often far removed from that of the majority of his subjects.
However, his personal charm with people at all levels of society
and his strong condemnation of prejudice went some way to assuage
republican and racial tensions building during his lifetime.
Death
Edward usually smoked twenty cigarettes and twelve cigars a day.
Towards the end of his life he increasingly suffered from
bronchitis. In March 1910 the King 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 whilst political tensions were so high. On 27
April he returned to Buckingham Palace, still suffering from severe
bronchitis.
Alexandra returned from visiting her
brother, King George I of Greece,
in Corfu
a week
later on 5 May.
The following day, the King 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."
Between moments of faintness, 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, "I am very
glad": his final words. At half-past-eleven he lost consciousness
for the last time and was put to bed. He died at 11:45 p.m.
Legacy

The public park in Lisbon, named after
Edward VII
Statues
of Edward can be found throughout the former empire, such as those
in Waterloo Place, London, Union Street, Aberdeen
, Queen's Park, Toronto
, Franklin Square, Hobart
, Queen Victoria Gardens,
Melbourne, and outside the Royal
Botanic Gardens, Sydney
.
The
lead ship of a new class of
battleships, launched in 1903, was named in his honour.
Many
schools in England are named after Edward; two of the largest are
in Melton Mowbray
and Sheffield
.
King Edward Memorial Hospital in India, the King Edward Medical
University in Pakistan, King
Edward Memorial Hospital for Women
in Subiaco, Western Australia
, and King
Edward VII Hall at the National
University of Singapore
carry King Edward's name. The Parque
Eduardo VII
in Lisbon, King
Edward Avenue in Vancouver
and King Edward Cigars are also named after
him.
As king, Edward VII proved a greater success than anyone had
expected, but he was already an old man 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, 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". Edward
received criticism for his apparent pursuit of self-indulgent
pleasure but he received great praise for his affable and kind good
manners, and his diplomatic skill. As his grandson wrote, "his
lighter side ... obscured the fact that he had both insight
and influence." "He had a tremendous zest for pleasure but he also
had a real sense of duty", wrote J. B. Priestley.
Lord Esher wrote that
Edward was "kind and debonair and not undignified – but too human".
Edward
VII is buried at St. George's Chapel, Windsor
Castle
. As
Barbara
Tuchman noted in
The Guns of
August,
his funeral
marked "the greatest assemblage of royalty and rank ever gathered
in one place and, of its kind, the last".
Edward had been afraid that his nephew, the German Emperor
Wilhelm II, would tip Europe into
war. Four years after Edward's death,
World
War I broke out. The naval reforms and the Anglo-French
alliance he had supported, as well as the relationships between his
extended royal family, were put to the test. The war marked the end
of the Edwardian way of life.
Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles and styles
- 9 November – 8 December 1841: His Royal
Highness The Duke of Cornwall
- 8 December 1841 – 22 January 1901: His
Royal Highness The Prince of Wales
- in Scotland: His Royal Highness The Prince Albert
Edward, Duke of Rothesay
- 17 January 1850 – 22 January 1901: The Earl of
Dublin (merged with the Crown in 1901)
- 22 January 1901 – 6 May 1910: His
Majesty The King
- with regard to India: His Imperial Majesty The
King-Emperor
Arms
When he was created Prince of Wales, Edward was granted a coat of
arms. These were those of the kingdom (and his mother), differenced
by a label argent, of three blank points, and an inescutcheon of
the shield of Saxony, representing his father. When he acceded as
King, he gained the arms of the kingdom, undifferenced.
Issue
Ancestors
See also
Notes and sources
- He was heir apparent for 59 years, 2 months and 14 days. The
current heir apparent, Charles, Prince of Wales,
would surpass this on 21 April 2011. He was Prince of Wales for 59
years, 1 month and 13 days; Charles would surpass this on 9
September 2017.
- (Subscription required)
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 4
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 18
- (Subscription required)
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 35.
- Bentley-Cranch, pp. 20–34
- Hough, pp. 39–47
- Bentley-Cranch, pp. 36–38
- Hough, pp. 64–66
- Bentley-Cranch, pp. 40–42
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 44
- Middlemas, p. 35
- 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" ( ).
- . They are listed at http://anthonyjcamp.com/page9.htm.
- Middlemas, pp. 74–80
- Priestley, pp. 18, 180
- ;
- Middlemas, p. 89
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 97
- Hattersley, pp. 18–19
- Bentley-Cranch, pp. 59–60
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 66
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 67 and Middlemas, pp. 48–52
- Bentley-Cranch, pp. 101–102
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 104
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 110
- Middlemas, p. 98
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 84
- Middlemas, p. 201
- Roberts, p. 35
- Middlemas, p. 200 and Hattersley, p. 27
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 80
- He was not a heavy drinker, though he did drink champagne and,
occasionally, port (Hattersley, p. 27).
- Hattersley, pp. 23–25
- Middlemas, p. 86
- Sir Frederick Ponsonby, 1st
Baron Sysonby quoted in Middlemas, p. 188
- Middlemas, pp. 95–96
- Battiscombe, p. 112
- Middlemas, p. 65
- Middlemas, p. 104
- No English or British sovereign has ever reigned under a double
name.
- Priestley, p. 9
- The Duke of Windsor, p. 14
- Middlemas, pp. 38, 84, 96; Priestley, p. 32
- The Duke of Windsor, p. 20
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 127
- Bentley-Cranch, pp. 122–139
- Hattersley, pp. 39–40
- Middlemas, pp. 125–126
- The Duke of Windsor, p. 15
- Middlemas, pp. 60–61 and pp. 172–175; Hattersley, pp.
460–464
- Middlemas, pp. 167, 169
- Middlemas, pp. 130–134
- See, principally, For a much shorter summary of Fisher's
reforms, see
- Middlemas, pp. 134–139
- Lambert, pp. 200–201.
- Hattersley, p. 168
- Hattersley, pp. 215–216
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 98
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 151
- Bentley-Cranch, p. 155
- King George V's diary, 6 May 1910. Royal Archives
- The Duke of Windsor, p. 69
- Priestley, p. 25
- Hattersley, p. 17
- Middlemas, pp. 176, 179
References
Further reading
External links